This is part of a collection of stories celebrating the many shapes retirement travel can take.
This story has been updated since its original publish date.
Picture this: youâre blowing out the candles at your retirement party. Itâs the end of an era and the first day of a new chapter in life. No more alarm clock, no more commuteâtime for that long-planned getaway to a faraway land.
, nearly two-thirds of Americans over 50 plan to travel in 2026. But traveling in retirement can come with challenges, including health considerations, finances, and family responsibilities. So, we asked some of the best-traveled retirees we could find for their best travel tips to help make your next journey unforgettable.
A couple of years ago, we turned to a smattering of retirees with feet in all types of worlds and asked them to tell us the things they wished they’d known when they first started traveling in retirement. Now, we’re back with more. We gathered itinerary ideas, must-haves for your suitcase, and things to avoid. But above all, everyone we spoke to had the same piece of advice: donât wait.
RenĂŠe Lanam, 63, loves action-packed, adventurous trips with her wife, friends, and children. Her favorite thing is hiking, but she knows that might not be possible forever. âOnce you hit the sixties,â she says, âyour timeline is different than when youâre younger.â
To plan ahead, RenĂŠe and her wife keep a shared list of destinations thatâs organized into three phases. Phase one includes the most active experiences, like hiking in
. Phase two is still active but less demanding, such as a visit to
with lots of walking. Phase three trips are ones they can do later in life: a
. âI got maybe 10 years of active travel left in me that I can count on,â Lanam says, âso letâs go knock those out while we can.â
While working or parenting school-age kids, your choice of vacation times is extremely limited. The freedom to hit the road outside those busy times is one of the best advantages of retirement travel. Thatâs why Paul and Lynn Zelevansky (77 and 76, respectively), visit the
opening, to avoid the worst of the crowds. It also helps with âavoiding tourist traps, the most sweltering hours at fairs, or not putting yourself in danger by flagging a taxi when itâs unsafe,â they say. (Lynn’s wallet was stolen on a crowded vaporetto ferry in 2022.)
Nobody wants to see the Mona Lisa through a thicket of selfie sticks. So artist Simma Liebman, 76, plans her museum visits to minimize crowds (particularly because sheâs immunocompromised.) Now Liebman hits the galleries âas early in the day as possibleâ and masks up while taking in the art „unless there are very few people inside.â That way, sheâs seen all the best stuff before the spring breakers even wake up.
Meet the Retirees Who Live on the Road, Exploring the US by RV
âI realized I liked traveling, but I want my stuff with me,â says Jenell Jones, 64. âIâm retired, I have no commitments. Where do I go?â
Richard Stewart, 58, a retired business valuer from
, Australia, takes his travel seriously. Heâs motorcycling around Australia soon, and debating between the Annapurna Circuit and Mount Everest base camp next. When he was working, he built his trips around work. Now itâs the other way around. âI blocked out the times I wanted to travel to different places, and then was able to slot my other meetings around that, which was a fantastic change,â he says.
Packed-to-the-brim itineraries used to be J. Patrice Marandelâs MO, but these days, the former chief curator at Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is more keen on scheduling âplenty of time for the unexpected,â he says. Travel-blogging couple Gillian Batt, 43, and Stephanie Myers, 51, concur. When you cram too much into a single trip, âthe whole experience just kind of becomes a blur,â they say. They recommend traveling to just one place per trip to avoid burnout and keep costs low.
SursÄ: https://www.cntraveler.com/story/golden-rules-of-retirement-travel