| Lonely Planet™ · Thorn Tree Forum · 2020 | ![]() |
RTW Trip For 2Interest forums / Gap Year & Round the World Travel | ||
Hi Everyone, Thank you all for your help :) | ||
I would begin by reading up on the subject. There are various guides that deal with RTW trips,or cover the 'highlights' of the various possibilities. There is also a lot of info.on this and other sites. | 1 | |
I have use Thorn Tree to assist in planning every trip we or I have taken in the last 10 years -- great info! However, the experts on Thorn Tree need help from you to help you. Questions that will help the experts help you: How do you like to travel: expensive, mid-range, or cheap? by plane or bus? are you going to use an around the world plane ticket which requires you to decide which airport/cities/countries you will use as a base? are you city people or outdoors people? budget: $20,000 or $50,000 or $100,000? interests: birding, diving, eating, culture, historical, etc? For starters you may want to think about: Japan -- 3 weeks Two years ago I drove from the U.S. to the end of the road in Panama and flew home -- 4+ months As I started this post, we need you help to help you. | 2 | |
Take a look at this excellent planning website: | 3 | |
I have done 3 around the world trips starting in Australia the first being 18 months, another 12 months and the last 7 months. Most people on this forum recommend just buying each flight leg of your journey singly. From Australia it is not really cost effective if you are visiting South America and Africa. If you were not going to those 2 continents I would agree with purchasing each flight as you go. I have used the Oneworld around the world fare and it was by far the cheapest way for me to travel at the time. It has increased dramatically in price in the last 5 years so do you own research to see if this is the most cost effective for you. I would recommend $30000 per person is a comfortable budget, budget (also depends on where you go at what you do), More money means more choices, not having to skimp when you do not want to eg: Diving. But you can also do the trip a lot cheaper. Visiting 4 continents in 12 months means you have to pick you places you want to visit in each. So do not try to pack in to much. 3 months in South America is enough for maybe Peru, Bolivia and maybe Ecuador with a side flight to Rio. Have fun and maybe give more specific questions if there is a particular pint you are stuck on, | 4 | |
we live in Australia and would really like to see alot of Asia & Europe, and also parts of Africa and South America. That's a hell of a lot to do in 12 months. Consider S.E.Asia, I'd recommend the following minimum stays as: Thailand: 3 weeks, Laos 2 weeks, vietnam 3 weeks, cambodia 2 weeks, Burma 3 weeks, Malaysian peninsula 2 weeks, Borneo 2 weeks, Singapore 3 days, Indonesia... 3 months? 6 months? Even without Indonesia (and I didn't mention Philippines, E. Timor, Brunai or PNG) that's over 4 months on minimum stay. In the end I would, personally, get a cheap flight SEAsia from Aus and see where you end up, chances ar it won't be around the world but a great trip at your pace not what you thought your pace was going to be. | 5 | |
Although 12 months sounds like a long time, it's not really long to visit 4 continents. If Europe and Asia are your pririoties, plan around those - maybe 6 months in Asia and 3 in Europe as a quick guide. Then think about taking side trips to Africa from Europe (you can get good deals on packages from Europe if you only want to go to a couple of places in Africa), and heading home via S America. You may be restricted in some places by visa issues (eg. Schengen visa area) I would recommend $30000 per person is a comfortable budget | 6 | |