Search interest in slow travel hit an all-time high in 2026, according to Google’s 2026 travel trends data, with searches for “slow travel Italy” alone climbing 100% in a single month. At the same time, bookings for trips of more than eight days grew by 19% compared to the prior year, which indicates a clear, measurable shift in how Americans choose to spend their time away.

The era of cramming 10 countries into two weeks is fading. In its place, a growing number of American travelers are choosing to settle into a single location for days or weeks at a time, trading the stamp-collecting pace of traditional tourism for something that feels less like a race and more like a life temporarily lived somewhere else. The shift toward longer vacations has been building for several years, but 2026 is the point at which the data stopped being a trend and started being a verdict.
The numbers behind the shift
The move towards slow travel comes from multiple directions at once: Google’s travel data puts search interest in slow travel at a record peak this year, while the European Travel Commission and Eurail’s Long-Haul Travel Barometer for 2026 found that the share of tourists identifying as slow travelers rose from 22% in 2025 to 26% in 2026. A separate Vrbo report says that 91% of travelers are interested in slower, simpler trips built around rest, reading, nature and meaningful experiences. That consistency across sources is hard to dismiss.
For American travelers specifically, the pull toward longer stays shows up in booking behavior. Trips of more than eight days are growing faster than any other trip length, and rental platforms are reporting sustained demand for weekly and monthly stays over short-term bookings. The preference for depth over breadth is no longer niche but the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. travel market.
What inspires Americans to slow down
Several forces converge to make slow travel not just appealing but practical, and this includes remote and hybrid work that’s changing the relationship between people and the office. This opportunity gives millions of workers the flexibility to extend a trip beyond the traditional one-week window without burning through all their paid leave. In addition, a 2026 analysis of digital nomad trends found more than 18 million Americans identified as digital nomads in 2025, a figure that continues to rise as more employers formalize remote work policies.
Financial pressure also plays a role, though perhaps not in the way people might expect. Rising travel costs have pushed some toward longer stays in fewer places rather than multi-stop itineraries, because a week in one rental is often cheaper per night than three nights each in three different hotels. Slow travel reduces daily tourist spending: travelers who find a local grocery store and a neighborhood coffee shop in week one tend to spend considerably less than those moving from destination to destination.
Burnout is the third driver and arguably the most significant. Industry trend analyses published in early 2026 describe a measurable shift toward travel that restores energy rather than depletes it, with wellness-focused and intentional trips rising at the expense of activity-heavy itineraries. Travelers increasingly ask what a vacation is for, and answer that question differently than they did a decade ago.
Farm stays, reading retreats and the new slow itinerary
Slow travel appears in some specific and surprising ways in 2026, with farm stays becoming one of the breakout categories of the year. Another Vrbo data found that 84% of travelers are interested in staying on or near a farm, and mentions of farm-related experiences in Vrbo guest reviews climbed 300% year over year. The trend is driven by travelers who want structure built around the land rather than a packed list of activities.
“It’s this slow travel movement. People just want a break from the hustle and bustle of everyday life,” Melanie Fish, travel expert for Expedia, Hotels.com and Vrbo, said to CNBC. Reading-focused trips, which Vrbo has dubbed “readaways,” see a similar surge, with mentions of reading-related terms in guest reviews up 285% year over year and Pinterest searches for “book club retreat ideas” climbing 275%.
What unites farm stays, reading retreats and other slow-travel formats is the absence of a packed itinerary. A day’s structure comes from the place itself, such as morning walks, a long lunch and time outside, rather than from a list of attractions to tick off before checkout. For many Americans who have spent years returning from vacations more tired than when they left, that absence is precisely the point.
Where American slow travelers are heading
Italy remains the most-searched slow travel destination for U.S. travelers, with Google data showing search interest in “slow travel Italy” doubling in a single month. Portugal’s Alentejo region draws consistent attention in 2026 travel trend reports as an ideal slow-travel base, with walkable historic centers, locally sourced food and wine and enough infrastructure to support a multi-week stay without the pace and cost of a major city.
In Asia, Vietnam, Thailand and Japan draw American travelers who want to spend a month rather than a week, often combining remote work with extended cultural exploration. On the domestic side, destinations including the Berkshires in Massachusetts, Door County in Wisconsin and Santa Fe in New Mexico are gaining traction with travelers who want slow travel without an international flight. The common thread across all of these places is the same: manageable scale, walkable centers and enough to do without needing to plan every hour.
The case for slowing down gets stronger
A 2026 global consultancy report found that nearly 60% of Gen Z and millennial travelers took at least two trips of five nights or more in 2025 and plan to increase their travel budgets again in 2026, with wellness and meaningful experiences as the stated priorities over rapid sightseeing. Wellness travel spending is rising in parallel, with travelers seeking trips built around rest, nature and recovery rather than a checklist of landmarks.
The numbers tell the same story from every angle: travelers who stay longer tend to spend more meaningfully, write more detailed reviews and return to destinations at higher rates than one-time visitors. The whirlwind vacation is not disappearing, but its market share is shrinking. Americans are deciding, in growing numbers, that a trip worth taking is a trip worth staying for.
Mandy Applegate is a luxury travel and fine dining journalist who has covered destinations across 47 countries, with a focus on high-end experiences and distinctive adventures. She is a co-founder of Food Drink Life, where she writes about travel, food and culture for a global audience. Her work is distributed through the Associated Press wire and appears in major U.S. outlets, including NBC, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Boston Herald and the Daily News.