The Points & Miles Backpacker: How to Choose a Travel Buddy
Where you go, what you do and how you do it are most emphasized when backpacking, but at least as much scrutiny should be put into who you travel with. You backpacking companion(s) can make or break a travel experience, and unlike other travel plans, changing your companion mid-trip can range from complicated to nearly impossible. Here is a list of potential travel buddies, and I'll help you prepare for what to expect with each of them.
1) No One
If you'd like to discover the most about yourself, travel solo. The challenges you will face and overcome will leave you with greater confidence and self-respect than when you started. It is also the best way to form new connections and friendships. In hostels, solo travelers gravitate together. Without the cushion of a familiar accomplice, you'll form deeper bonds quicker with people who were strangers a few days ago.
Solo travel also means complete freedom. You can do what you want and change your plans on a whim. Don't feel like exploring more temples today and just want take your book to a park? You don't have to justify that to anyone.
Traveling on my own takes me to extremes. The highs are the highest I feel, but the lows, which happen far less often, can take me pretty low. However, I've formed the vast majority of lasting friendships when traveling solo.

I've already discussed the safety of solo travel, especially for women, so this shouldn't be a deterrent. And don't make the mistake of associating solo travel with loneliness. There are always friends to make in a hostel or locals eager to share their way of life. Yet the option to spend time by yourself is always there. Travel solo, and do so especially if the thought of it scares you.
2) Significant Other
Your most obvious choice for a travel partner is your significant other, if you have one. Whether you're dating casually or in a long-term fully committed relationship, traveling together is a test that you won't find elsewhere.
Nash and Mia Ream met in the corporate world, and after falling in love and getting married, they abandoned their cushy jobs to start a life of full-time travel. They document their travels on their popular Instagram page, and I asked them about their travel life together.

How is your relationship different now than before you traveled?
Traveling the world together has given us the opportunity to bond in a way that's often not possible in everyday life. We have been battle-tested by the long hours spent together (sometimes going weeks without ever separating). We learned a lot about each other as we navigated new places and challenging situations, and we figure out how to work as a team and how to play on our collective strengths. Best of all, we've been able to grow together, rather than separately, strengthening our partnership as a result. Today, it feels like we are soulmates or kindred spirits who have spent lifetimes together.
What tips do you have for traveling with your partner?
Learn to prioritize fun, learning and adventure over just seeing every popular sight. Of course you should see Machu Picchu when you are in Peru, but some of your best memories will be getting lost in little alleyways or drinking tea in no-name cafes while sharing your dreams with one another. We always have a long list of sights we want to visit and there isn't always time to see it all. Instead, we prioritize experiencing each place together through it's culture, people and food, and we are rarely disappointed!
Travel does have the power to make (or break) a relationship. However, an inability to travel together doesn't necessary spell doom. I know plenty of couples whose interests in travel differ greatly, so they choose to do it separately. One thing is certain though — after traveling together, your relationship will never be the same.
3) Friends
A friendship is another relationship that can be taken to the next level when traveling together. Out of the most common options, though, it may need the most amount of scrutiny. Whether your friend is from childhood, a teammate, an old college roommate or even someone you actually like at the office, none of these are indicators you'll travel well together.
Hopefully, you know your friends well enough to tell if you'll get along with them, but you'll also want travel interests and styles to align before committing to anything. The best way to know this is to compare previous travels. Talk about the aspects of travel that you enjoy the most. Discuss preferences when it comes to lodging, socializing and advanced planning. Also, find places you have both been, and talk about what you liked most in those places. If they can't stop gushing over the Louvre and all you want to do is find a waterfall to scramble up and jump off of, maybe just stick to beers together after Tuesday night's softball league.
I've found that you are more likely to find a good travel partner in the friends you've met in your adult life — friends you've chosen out of similar interests over friends you've always had because you went to elementary school together.

Finally, give yourself an out if things don't go so smoothly. If you're backpacking for a bit, talk about the possibility of going separate ways if one or both of you decides that would be best. It could save the friendship you have back home.
4) Siblings
There is no one that has known you longer and knows you better than your siblings. Conversations aren't superficial, and you're not worried about hiding your actual preferences for the sake of politeness. Sharing a hostel room or bunk bed may even be nostalgic.
You probably already know if traveling with your sibling is a good idea, or which of them you could travel with if you have several. But chances are you haven't lived together since you were children. This will give you a chance to rediscover your relationship as an adult. Worst case, you crash and burn and chalk it up as a sibling tiff. For better or worse, they are still your sibling forever. Best case, you could end up better friends and travel buddies than you ever thought to be possible.

The next two potential group can work out, but also have a larger chance of ending badly. Proceed with caution.
1) Warning - Open Invite for Anyone
If you've done a fair bit of travel, you may have become an advocate for others to do it too. And perhaps through your Instagram pics you have inspired an acquaintance to go backpacking too. Great! However, just because you inspired someone to travel, you are not obligated to travel with them. They may want to and they may ask to, but you have to evaluate if this is really the best thing for you. Examine your relationship with this person and if this is someone you would choose to travel with. If you think you'll end up being a babysitter, you won't enjoy yourself, and you're not doing this friend any favors by letting them lean on you. Sure, there is much appeal for them traveling with an experienced backpacker, but don't be afraid to ask yourself, what's in it for you?
2) Warning – Groups of Friends
The idea of taking your friend group from home on a backpacking trip may seem appealing, but make sure you know what you are getting yourself into. The more people that get added to a group, the more differing preferences and opinions you'll have. Backpacking trips don't normally have rigid itineraries, so finding a consensus on what to do or where to eat can be a tough task you'll face over and over again. Voice your preferences, but be ok with deferring to the majority.
Also, the focus tends to be more about your group experience together rather than meeting new people or immersing yourself in a culture. It works best to keep the time in large groups relatively brief — keeping everyone together and happy for more than a week will be a huge challenge.

Do you have any tips for picking a travel partner? Share them in the comments!
The Points & Miles Backpacker is a weekly column appearing every Monday. TPG Contributor Brian Biros, who has backpacked the globe for the past 15 years, discusses how to fund this adventurous, budgeted and increasingly popular form of travel with points and miles. He'll also explore all things backpacking-related. Read his story here and his high-level approach here.
Are you looking to back that pack up and get some guidance? Send your questions to backpacker@thepointsguy.com !
TPG featured card
at American Express's secure site
Terms & restrictions apply. See rates & fees.
| 3X | Earn 3X Miles on Delta purchases. |
| 1X | Earn 1X Miles on all other eligible purchases. |
Pros
- Delta SkyClub access when flying Delta
- Annual companion ticket for travel on Delta (upon renewal)
- Ability to earn MQDs through spending
- Various statement credits for eligible purchases
Cons
- Steep annual fee of $650
- Other Delta cobranded cards offer superior earning categories
- Earn 100,000 Bonus Miles after you spend $6,000 or more in purchases with your new Card within the first 6 months of Card Membership and an additional 25,000 bonus miles after you make an additional $3,000 in purchases on the Card within your first 6 months, starting from the date that your account is opened. Offer Ends 04/01/2026.
- Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card Members receive 15 Visits per Medallion® Year to the Delta Sky Club® when flying Delta and can unlock an unlimited number of Visits after spending $75,000 in purchases on your Card in a calendar year. Plus, you’ll receive four One-Time Guest Passes each Medallion Year so you can share the experience with family and friends when traveling Delta together.
- Enjoy complimentary access to The Centurion® Lounge in the U.S. and select international locations (as set forth on the Centurion Lounge Website), Sidecar by The Centurion® Lounge in the U.S. (see the Centurion Lounge Website for more information on Sidecar by The Centurion® Lounge availability), and Escape Lounges when flying on a Delta flight booked with the Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card. § To access Sidecar by The Centurion® Lounge, Card Members must arrive within 90 minutes of their departing flight (including layovers). To access The Centurion® Lounge, Card Members must arrive within 3 hours of their departing flight. Effective July 8, 2026, during a layover, Card Members must arrive within 5 hours of the connecting flight.
- Receive $2,500 Medallion® Qualification Dollars with MQD Headstart each Medallion Qualification Year and earn $1 MQD for each $10 in purchases on your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card with MQD Boost to get closer to Status next Medallion Year.
- Enjoy a Companion Certificate on a Delta First, Delta Comfort, or Delta Main round-trip flight to select destinations each year after renewal of your Card. The Companion Certificate requires payment of government-imposed taxes and fees of between $22 and $250 (for itineraries with up to four flight segments). Baggage charges and other restrictions apply. Delta Basic experiences are not eligible for this benefit.
- $240 Resy Credit: When you use your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card for eligible purchases with U.S. Resy restaurants, you can earn up to $20 each month in statement credits. Enrollment required.
- $120 Rideshare Credit: Earn up to $10 back in statement credits each month after you use your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card to pay for U.S. rideshare purchases with select providers. Enrollment required.
- Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card Members get 15% off when using miles to book Award Travel on Delta flights through delta.com and the Fly Delta app. Discount not applicable to partner-operated flights or to taxes and fees.
- With your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card, receive upgrade priority over others with the same Medallion tier, product and fare experience purchased, and Million Miler milestone when you fly with Delta.
- Earn 3X Miles on Delta purchases and earn 1X Miles on all other eligible purchases.
- No Foreign Transaction Fees. Enjoy international travel without additional fees on purchases made abroad.
- $650 Annual Fee.
- Apply with confidence. Know if you're approved for a Card with no impact to your credit score. If you're approved and you choose to accept this Card, your credit score may be impacted.
- Terms Apply.
- See Rates & Fees


