Should I join a group tour alone?

Everyone told me not to travel solo during a pandemic.

Especially not to learn snowboarding, a sport that not all travel insurance policies cover. It didn’t help that I wanted to visit a country where I don’t speak the language.

Administrative matters — such as Covid tests, vaccination certificates and health declarations — would be painful for a solo traveler, I was told. I could also catch Covid or injure myself while snowboarding overseas.

It made sense, but I didn’t know anyone who could go with me. So I joined a Singapore tour group to South Korea.

I didn’t know it when I booked my trip, but I was part of a trend of solo women travelers who are joining group tours as tourism finds its feet again.

The Singapore-based agency I traveled with, EU Holidays, said many more solo travelers have joined its trips since it restarted international tours in September.

The numbers are small, but there has been a noticeable increase, according to Wong Yew Hoong, director at EU Holidays.

Before the pandemic, he said, solo travelers rarely joined their tours “because they normally plan and travel on their own,” he told CNBC Travel. Now they are, and most solo travelers are women, he said.

Global trend

In other parts of the world, this trend started before the pandemic.

The Canadian-based travel agency G Adventures said solo travelers made up 51% of its bookings this year — and 70% of them are female, up slightly from 2019.

The solo travel trend has grown exponentially over the past four years, according to Melissa DaSilva, North America president of The Travel Corporation’s tour division, TTC Tour Brands. TTC owns travel agencies such as Trafalgar and Contiki.

“The pandemic has certainly spurred interest even further,” she told CNBC, adding that TTC Tour Brands has made more single rooms available and reduced or waived extra fees for single travelers in response to solo travel demand.

The SoFe Traveler Network, which organizes tours for solo female travelers, said bookings have reached about 60% of pre-pandemic levels.

Even married people are traveling solo because they have different interests from their spouses, said Bruce Poon Tip, owner of Just You, a solo traveler specialist that organizes adult-only tours.

The pandemic made people more determined to tick off their “bucket list” destinations, said Tip, who also founded G Adventures.

“[But] couples don’t necessarily have the same lists, and so they’re traveling separately,” he told CNBC.

According to Just You’s website, women usually make up around three-quarters of travelers in a solo travel group.

‘Don’t wait’ attitude

Safety in numbers

Meeting people, making friends

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/05/03/female-solo-travel-should-i-join-a-group-tour-alone.html