Single-destination holidays are easier to plan. Multi-stop trips are harder — so why do travellers who've done them rarely go back to staying in one place?
Single-destination holidays are easy to plan. Pick a city, book a hotel, done. Multi-stop trips take more effort — so why do people who've done them rarely go back to staying in one place?
The most obvious difference is breadth. A week in Paris gives you Paris — excellent if that's what you want. A week driving from Edinburgh to the Cairngorms gives you coastline, highland moorland, whisky distilleries and medieval market towns. Same holiday length, very different scope.
On a multi-stop trip — particularly a road trip — the drive itself stops being a means of getting somewhere and becomes something you're actually doing.
Empty mountain roads. Coastal views that open up unexpectedly. Stopping for fuel in a town you'd never have heard of otherwise and finding a remarkable bakery. On a well-planned multi-stop trip, these aren't side effects of travel — they're the point.
Spending two or three days in several different towns gives you a different read on a country than spending a week in its most-visited city. You see how people actually live rather than how the tourism industry presents things.
Multi-stop trips are harder to plan. You're booking accommodation in multiple places, managing different check-in times, and spending some of your holiday time moving between them.
The planning overhead is real. Route planning tools — like the ones on Routebook — help reduce it, but you're still doing more work upfront than you would for a single-city break.
They also don't suit everyone equally. If you find packing and unpacking stressful, or prefer to arrive somewhere and deeply settle in, multi-stop may frustrate you.
Based on the routes our community has shared, multi-stop travel tends to work best when:
Countries and regions where the format really pays off: New Zealand, Scotland, Scandinavia, Japan, the American Southwest, coastal Portugal, the Canadian Rockies.
Multi-stop travel isn't superior to single-destination holidays. They're different formats for different travellers.
If you like the sound of a trip where the drive itself is interesting and you end up with a more varied collection of memories — multi-stop is worth trying.
Browse community road trips on Routebook to see what others have mapped.
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