Women Solo Travel Tips: Why a Retreat Might Be the Most Powerful First Solo Trip You Ever Take
By Elif Köse | The Confidence Architect
You’ve probably thought about it more times than you’ve admitted out loud.
Booking the ticket. Taking the trip. Going somewhere entirely on your own without waiting for a friend to commit, a partner to get time off work, or life to finally calm down enough for you to prioritise yourself for once.
Just you, your suitcase, your thoughts, and the excitement of stepping into somewhere unfamiliar knowing nobody there expects anything from you.
And yet for so many women, the idea of solo travel still feels emotionally bigger than the practical act itself. It isn’t usually about whether they can physically get on the plane. It’s about everything the decision represents. Independence. Courage. Self-trust. Space. Permission. The possibility that maybe they are allowed to choose themselves without guilt.
I was speaking about this very thing live on LBC radio last week during a conversation around why solo female travel has exploded globally over recent years, and why women’s retreats in particular continue to grow at an extraordinary rate. Over the last five years, I’ve hosted transformational retreats both in the UK and in my hometown of Ayvalık, and almost every single one has sold out. What’s been most fascinating to witness is not just the rise in women travelling alone, but the deeper reason behind it. Women are no longer simply looking for a holiday. They are searching for experiences that help them reconnect with parts of themselves they lost somewhere between responsibility, pressure, burnout, caregiving, ambition, heartbreak, motherhood, survival, and the endless noise of modern life.
Because the truth is, many women are not exhausted because life is hard. They are exhausted because they have spent years holding everything together while abandoning themselves in the process.
That is why solo travel has become so emotionally significant for women.
Not because women suddenly woke up fearless. But because many have reached a point where waiting no longer feels acceptable.
According to global wellness tourism reports, solo female travel is one of the fastest-growing sectors in tourism, with women now making the majority of wellness retreat bookings worldwide. But unlike traditional holidays that often leave people returning home needing another break afterwards, retreats offer something entirely different. They create interruption. Space. Perspective. A pause from the constant performing, producing, managing, fixing, and emotional labour that so many women carry every day without even realising how heavy it has become.
And this is where choosing the right retreat matters enormously.
Not all retreats are created equally, despite what social media might suggest. Some are essentially luxury holidays with yoga added onto the schedule. Others are fitness-based, spiritually focused, business-orientated, or purely relaxation driven. There is nothing wrong with any of those experiences, but transformational retreats operate differently. They are designed not simply to help women rest temporarily, but to help them return home differently — more connected to themselves, more emotionally regulated, clearer in their decisions, more confident in their boundaries, and often profoundly changed in ways they did not expect before arriving.
This is the foundation of the work I’ve built through my retreats.
Women often arrive believing they need motivation, confidence, or clarity, but what they usually need first is nervous system safety. They need somewhere they can finally exhale without being needed by anyone. Somewhere they can stop performing strength and start experiencing peace. Somewhere they can sit at a dinner table without needing to prove themselves, compete, or maintain an image.
That changes people more than any motivational speech ever could.
One of the things guests tell me repeatedly is that my retreats feel different from anything they have experienced before, and I think much of that comes from the fact that these retreats are not created from theory. They are built from lived experience. Before becoming a transformational coach, I spent over 15 years building businesses within the fashion industry. I understand high performance. I understand burnout. I understand reinvention, identity shifts, grief, pressure, and the strange loneliness that can exist even inside successful lives. My retreats were never designed as “wellness experiences.” They were created as environments where women could genuinely reconnect with themselves without needing to escape who they are.
And perhaps that is why women travel across the world to attend them.
Especially the Turkey retreats.
There is something about Ayvalık that softens people almost immediately. Maybe it’s the slower pace of life. The olive trees. The turquoise sea. The warmth of Turkish hospitality. The long dinners outdoors under the stars. The fresh organic food. The boat trips through crystal-clear water. The conversations that continue long after midnight because nobody wants to leave the table yet. Or maybe it is simply that when women finally step away from the environments that have kept them in survival mode for years, they can hear themselves again.
Because that is what retreats are really about.
Not escaping life.
Returning to it differently.
Of course, travelling solo as a woman still brings understandable questions around safety, confidence, and emotional readiness, especially for women who have never travelled alone before. One of the reasons retreats have become such a powerful entry point into solo travel is because they offer both independence and support simultaneously. You arrive independently, but you are immediately welcomed into community. There is structure without pressure. Freedom without isolation. Connection without force.
And importantly, the right retreat should never make women feel emotionally exposed or unsafe in the name of “healing.” This is something I care deeply about within my own work. Women are never pushed to share traumatic experiences publicly, forced into vulnerability, or made to feel that transformation must look dramatic to be real. Some breakthroughs happen quietly during a breathwork session. Others happen while swimming in the sea, laughing over breakfast, journalling beside the water, or hearing another woman finally articulate something you thought only you had experienced.
Those moments stay with people for years.
That is also why small retreat groups matter so much. I intentionally keep my retreats intimate because genuine connection rarely happens inside huge crowds. When women feel emotionally safe, they naturally begin opening again. Friendships form quickly. Walls soften. Conversations deepen. Many women who attended my retreats years ago still travel together now, support each other’s businesses, and remain close parts of each other’s lives. You cannot manufacture that kind of connection through marketing. It happens because people feel seen.
And honestly, I think that is what many women are craving most right now.
Not another perfectly curated Instagram moment.
But real connection.
Real rest.
Real conversations.
Real joy.
Real peace.
So if you’ve been considering booking your first solo trip, let me say this clearly: you do not need to wait until you feel fearless before you go. Confidence is rarely something that appears beforehand. More often, it is something built through the decision itself. Through boarding the plane. Through arriving somewhere unfamiliar. Through realising you are capable of far more than the fearful voice in your mind once convinced you.
Sometimes the most life-changing thing a woman can do is place herself in a completely new environment and finally give herself permission to receive support, beauty, rest, perspective, and expansion without needing to earn it first.
And perhaps that is why retreats continue to sell out.
Because women are no longer only asking, “Where should I travel next?”
They are asking a much deeper question now.
“How do I want to feel while I’m living my life?”
If something inside you has been quietly craving space, clarity, reconnection, meaningful conversations, nervous system restoration, or simply a chance to breathe properly again, you can explore my upcoming UK and Turkey retreats here:
Your first solo trip does not have to mean doing everything alone.
Sometimes it simply means being brave enough to finally choose yourself.
