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Slow Travel 2026: Why More People Are Staying Longer and Moving Less

"Slow travel" hit an all-time Google search high in 2026. We explain the movement, why it makes financial sense, and how to find cheap one-way or open-jaw flights for extended stays.

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Auronex Fly Editorial · Travel Research Team
March 20, 20267 min read
Quiet mountain valley with a winding road and morning mist — slow travel
Photo: Rohit Tandon / Unsplash

Google Trends confirmed it: "slow travel" hit an all-time search high in 2026. "Month long hotel stay," "month long retreat," and "slow travel Italy" all trended simultaneously — a clear signal that the post-pandemic rush of "revenge travel" (cram as many destinations as possible) is giving way to something more deliberate.

Slow travel means spending 2–6 weeks in one place rather than hitting 5 cities in 7 days. It's both a philosophy and — increasingly — a financial strategy that often costs less than traditional tourist travel.

The Economics of Slow Travel

Conventional tourism is expensive at the margins: daily hotel check-ins, tourist-area restaurants, entrance fees. Slow travel compresses these costs:

  • Accommodation: Monthly rentals on Airbnb average 30–40% below nightly rates. In cities like Tbilisi, Lisbon, or Chiang Mai, a comfortable studio costs €600–€900/month versus €60–€90/night for a hotel room.
  • Food: Access to a kitchen eliminates 2–3 restaurant meals per day. Neighbourhood markets cost a fraction of tourist restaurants.
  • Transport: One-way flights instead of return tickets. Flying into one city and out of another (open-jaw) often costs less than a return.
  • Mental cost: No daily packing, unpacking, navigation, and orientation cost. The cognitive load of slow travel is dramatically lower.

Best Slow Travel Destinations for 2026

Lisbon / Porto, Portugal

EU Schengen — 90 days for most non-EU visitors. Portugal's D8 Digital Nomad visa allows longer stays. Monthly studio: €900–€1,400. Excellent food culture, mild Atlantic climate. NHD: Nomad score: very high.

Tbilisi, Georgia

365-day visa-free for most nationalities. Monthly apartment: €400–€700. Georgian wine culture, natural sulphur baths in the old city, and the Caucasus mountains within 30 minutes. Fast growing but not yet crowded. Flights from Istanbul €40–€80 one-way; from Dubai €150–€250.

Chiang Mai, Thailand

The classic nomad base. 30-day visa-free for most nationalities (extension options available). Monthly studio near the Old City: €200–€350. Hundreds of coworking spaces. Excellent street food (€1–€3 per meal). Fly from Dubai: €180–€280 return.

Valletta, Malta

The EU's smallest capital — perfect for a Mediterranean slow travel month. EU citizens no restriction; non-EU Schengen rules apply. Tiny, walkable, English-speaking, excellent ferry connections to Gozo and Sicily. Monthly rental: €700–€1,000.

Medellín, Colombia

The city that transformed its reputation and became South America's top digital nomad destination. 90-day visa-free for most EU, UK, and GCC passports. Monthly apartment: €350–€600. Eternal spring climate (22–26°C year-round). Direct flights from Paris CDG: €450–€650 one-way.

How to Book Flights for Slow Travel

The key difference from standard travel booking:

  • Search one-way, not return: You don't know when you'll leave. One-ways are more expensive per flight but avoid the sunk-cost trap of an unused return ticket.
  • Open-jaw tickets: Fly into Lisbon, out of Porto — or into Bangkok, out of Chiang Mai. Auronex Fly supports open-jaw searches across all carriers.
  • Be flexible on departure date: For slow travel, the exact departure day matters much less than price. Use the date flexibility grid to find the cheapest week to start your journey.
#slow travel#long term travel#one way flights#digital nomad#travel 2026 trends

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