Backpacking tips and planning guides for getting the important stuff right early.
This page pulls together the guides that do the most work before a trip starts: first-trip basics, route planning, transport, travel money, connectivity, and the decisions that save the most stress later.
If you are not sure where to start, start here. These are the pages most likely to help you plan better, book smarter, and avoid mistakes that are easy to fix now and annoying to fix later.
Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Start with these
These four guides cover the basics: how to think about a trip, how to shape a route, and where to start when you need practical advice rather than more tabs open.
First trip
First-Time Backpacking Guide
A solid starting point if you want to avoid the classic beginner mistakes before they cost money or time.
Route planning
3-Month Southeast Asia Route
A longer route plan with a sensible order, better pacing, and fewer avoidable logistics mistakes.
Destination guide
Thailand Travel Guide
One of the easiest places to start if you are choosing a flexible, backpacker-friendly first destination.
Itinerary
14 Day South Korea Itinerary
A practical route through Seoul, Gyeongju, Busan, and Jeju that shows how to structure a tighter trip well.
Sort the expensive stuff early
Flights, transport, connectivity, and insurance can either be sorted cleanly before the trip or become a headache once you are already moving.
Cost of Backpacking Southeast Asia
Use this to set a more realistic budget before the trip starts drifting.
Southeast Asia Transport Guide
A cleaner look at buses, trains, ferries, and flights across the region.
Best eSIMs for Southeast Asia
Compare the easiest eSIM options before you land and need data immediately.
Travel Insurance for Backpackers
A practical comparison if you are deciding whether the cheaper policy is actually worth it.
Useful hubs
If you want a shorter path to the right part of the site, these pages are worth bookmarking.
A note on recommendations
Some guides on the site include affiliate links, especially for things like eSIMs and insurance. They help support the site, but they should still solve a real travel problem first.
If a page recommends something, the point should be practical: easier arrivals, fewer booking mistakes, clearer comparisons, or better value over the course of a trip.
Need the trip essentials?
If you only sort two things before you travel, make it data and insurance. They solve more day-one problems than almost anything else.
