Los Angeles Times

NO W’ S THE TIME TOGO SOLO

S I NGLE TRAVELERS F I ND SWEETENED DEALS

- BY ROSEMARY McCLURE

SOLO TRAVEL offers a fringe benefit: It allows you to be selfish. You can do whatever you want whenever you want. Hmmm … that sounds a lot like our current lifestyle in quarantine. Want to eat lunch at 4 p. m.? Do it. Want to skip the workout and watch TV instead? Why not? There’s no one around to shame you.

Social distancing — especially for singles — can be a lonely propositio­n. But it also reaffirms some of the benefits of being alone. You don’t have to worry about someone else’s sleep schedule, hourlong baths or habit of leaving pistachio shells everywhere.

Perhaps those are reasons solo travel is expanding despite the coronaviru­s’ overall effect on the travel landscape. Going it alone has definite pluses, and tour operators are seeing an uptick in solo- cation bookings. Granted, many of the trips are six months or more in the future, but companies report a definite trend. And they’re adding perks to sweeten the deals.

The bargains are all over the map, literally, and appeal to a wide range of travelers. There are camping deals for solos; minitours for beginning travelers ages 18 to 29; bike tours for cyclists who delight in hitting back roads; and European odysseys for people who have missed the cities, museums and rivers of the Continent.

Overseas Adventure Travel, known for its small- group tours, has seen solo bookings mushroom, with more than 24,000 single travelers signed up for 2021. Chief Executive Brian Fitzgerald attributes the surge to pent- up demand for travel and notes that he’s not surprised because “solo travelers tend to be resilient and independen­t.”

The organizati­on has boosted availabili­ty for singles by 76% over 2019 and is offering many low- cost single supplement­s, the bane of solo travelers, or waiving them altogether. The supplement is a premium charge levied on singles because they’re the sole occupant of a room.

But the pandemic’s fallout has erased some single supplement­s. Even Cox & Kings, one of the oldest premium tour companies in the world, has eliminated some of its charges for singles after conducting a May survey that indicated its clients were clamoring for solo opportunit­ies. “The market,” said spokeswoma­n Sue Livsey, “is very, very robust.” Among the tours without a supplement is a Panama and Costa Rica adventure.

Travelers can find good deals by shopping for tour operators and cruise providers that waive the single supplement, offer smaller rooms or help you find a roommate.

One place to start is the Solo Traveler website ( solotravel­erworld.com), which features tours, cruises and other travel products for singles. The site emphasizes tour companies that have no or low ( less than 20%) single supplement­s, said Tracey Nesbitt, the editor. Current deals include: > Colorado River rafting trip, Holiday River Expedition­s. Six days from $ 1,135; no single supplement. Various dates in 2021.

> Utah Explorer, Active Adventures. Six days from $ 2,898; 50% single- supplement discount for Solo Traveler readers.

> Women in Wine, Napa & Sonoma, Girls’ Guide to Paris. Five days from $ 4,375; no single supplement. Feb. 19- 23.

Nesbitt is a confirmed solo traveler herself. “I learned right away, on my first internatio­nal trip with a friend, that traveling on my own would be my preference going forward. The freedom to do and see what I want; to change plans on a dime if I discover something new along the way; to learn about myself and what I am capable of — this is what I love about solo travel.” Besides overseeing the website, Nesbitt moderates the Solo Travel Society Facebook page, which has more than a quarter of a million followers — nearly half of whom are millennial­s, Nesbitt said.

The pandemic, of course, put everything on hold. But solo travel was gaining in popularity even before the coronaviru­s hit. The last few years were good ones for singles, with tour companies and cruise lines starting to reduce single- supplement charges.

A few river cruise lines offer such deals, including Ama-Waterways, which has a solo travelers special with 25% to 50% off single supplement­s. The line also has some single- occupancy staterooms that require no supplement.

Riviera River Cruises is taking its program one step further: All cabins and suites on eight European cruises the line has planned for 2021 will be filled by solo travelers. Instead of 169 passengers, the ships will carry 88. And solos won’t have to pay a single supplement.

Here’s a sampling of other travel deals offered by companies that specialize in solo travel:

> Eighteen- year- old to thirty- something novices can explore the West on a road trip from L. A. to San Diego, Las Vegas, the Grand Canyon and Monument Valley, Ariz. They’ll also hit the cable cars of San Francisco with G Adventures on this weeklong trip for $ 1,002 per person; single supplement $ 199.

> Bike fans can challenge themselves to pedal across Death Valley on an eight- day van- supported spring tour with AdventureC­ycling.org. $ 1,499 per person; no supplement.

> Millennial­s who want to see some of the nation’s great cities can take an Intrepid Travel tour from New York City to New Orleans, by way of Philadelph­ia and Washington, D. C. From $ 1,629; single supplement $ 210.

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MONEY MATTERS

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