Long-Term & Slow Travel Planning

Multi-week and multi-month travel requires structured planning across visas, accommodation, routing and budget. I design long-stay travel plans that are practical, financially clear, and built to live in.

Why Long-Term Travel Requires Strategic Planning

Travelling for 30, 60, or 90 days is not simply a longer holiday. It becomes a lifestyle decision. The pace is different. The logistics are more complex. The financial planning must be precise.Visa rules vary by country. Accommodation contracts change after 28 days. Transport between destinations needs to minimise fatigue. Insurance, banking access, and health coverage all require advance thought.

Without structure, extended travel can become exhausting and expensive. With the right planning, it becomes sustainable, rewarding, and deeply personal.

Slow travel is about immersion. It allows you to live in a place rather than pass through it. The difference is in the planning.

Who This Service Is For

This service is ideal for:

If you value depth over speed and comfort over chaos, this approach will suit you.

What’s Included in Long-Term Travel Planning

Each long-term itinerary is built around structure and sustainability.
You receive:

Nothing is rushed. Every location has a purpose within the wider journey.

Our Long-Term Travel Planning Process

Strategy & Feasibility

We begin with a focused consultation. We discuss timeframe, budget range, pace preference, and lifestyle expectations. I assess visa allowances, seasonal patterns, and regional flow to build a practical foundation.

Structural Design & Booking

Once the route is approved, accommodation, transport, and key experiences are secured with long-stay value in mind. Flexibility is built into the plan where needed.

Preparation & Ongoing Support

Before departure, you receive a clear travel plan, documentation checklist, and regional guidance. Support remains available while you travel, should adjustments be required.
Long-term travel should feel steady, not stressful.

Real Example: 60-Day Europe Slow Travel Plan

A recent client wanted to spend two months in Europe without changing hotels every few days.

We structured a 60-day plan across Portugal, Italy, and France. Each country included one primary base city and one secondary stay. Travel days were spaced out to avoid fatigue. Accommodation was selected for comfort, walkability, and long-stay value.

Rail travel replaced short-haul flights where practical. Budget was monitored carefully to balance city living with slower regional experiences.

The result felt like living abroad, not racing through a checklist.

Frequently Asked Questions

How far in advance should I plan long-term travel?

Ideally three to six months ahead, especially for high-demand European stays or seasonal destinations.

Yes. While I do not provide legal advice, I guide you through general visa duration rules and timing considerations so your itinerary aligns with entry limits.

Absolutely. We consider internet reliability, accommodation suitability, time zone differences, and local living logistics.

Often yes. Longer stays can reduce nightly accommodation costs and minimise frequent transport expenses. The key is structured planning.

I guide clients towards suitable long-term travel insurance providers based on duration and destination.

Extended Travel Should Feel Intentional

Slow travel works best when the structure supports the freedom. With the right planning, you gain depth without losing stability.

If you are considering 30 days or more abroad, the planning should reflect that commitment.

Credentials & Professional Experience

Long-term travel requires both global perspective and structured planning experience. I bring both to every extended itinerary.