There is a particular kind of conversation that only seems to happen on holiday. Something about being removed from the usual routine, the daily logistics and the invisible architecture of ordinary life, creates space for exchanges that never quite find their moment at home. Many women who travel with their mothers or daughters describe this as one of the most valued things about the trip: not the destination, but what the distance from normal life makes possible.
Multigenerational travel is one of the fastest-growing trends in the travel industry right now, and the numbers bear it out. Research from the Family Travel Association found that close to half of all travellers are now choosing trips that span multiple generations, a seventeen per cent increase from two years ago. The motivations are overwhelmingly about connection: in a survey of multigenerational travellers, eighty-nine per cent cited quality time with extended family as their primary reason for taking the trip.
Why multigenerational travel is surging
The surge in multigenerational travel is partly a post-pandemic recalibration. The years of restricted movement shifted a lot of people’s thinking about when to take trips and who to take them with. The idea of waiting for the perfect moment, or of taking the big trip later, lost some of its appeal when later became suddenly uncertain. There is also a practical dimension: as Boomers age into their sixties and seventies, many are still fit, mobile, financially comfortable and genuinely keen to travel. The window for ambitious, long-distance travel is finite, and people are increasingly aware of it.
For adult daughters travelling with ageing mothers, there is often an urgency to this awareness that goes unstated but shapes the whole trip. These are not just holidays. They are also a kind of archiving, a deliberate investment in shared memory while the opportunity remains.

Pexels
What makes mother-daughter trips different
The mother-daughter pairing is one of the most common and most emotionally complex versions of multigenerational travel. The relationship carries decades of history, shifting power dynamics and often some unresolved tension alongside its warmth. The same intimacy that makes the trip meaningful can also make it difficult, particularly when travel styles diverge significantly.
Mothers and daughters frequently differ in how they want to spend their time: one wants to slow down and absorb the atmosphere, the other wants to cover ground and tick off sights. One goes to bed early, the other wants to stay out. These differences are rarely dealbreakers, but they need to be acknowledged and planned around rather than hoped away. The trips that work well tend to be the ones where both people have had an honest conversation in advance about what they actually want from the time together, rather than each assuming they are aligned.
What frequently surprises women who take these trips is how much they learn about their mother or daughter as a person rather than as a relationship. Removed from their usual roles, both people show sides of themselves that home life obscures. Mothers who seemed cautious at home turn out to be adventurous with new food. Daughters who seemed distracted reveal a depth of curiosity and observation that the daily pace never quite surfaced.
How to plan a multigenerational trip that works
Multigenerational travel requires more planning than a solo or couple’s trip, and the planning itself is worth treating as part of the experience rather than a chore. Deciding on the destination together, rather than one person presenting a fait accompli, increases everyone’s investment in the trip and surfaces any significant mismatches early, while there is still time to adjust.
Accommodation choice has a disproportionate effect on how multigenerational travel feels. Separate rooms with access to shared common space, a villa, a self-catering apartment or a suite arrangement, reduces the friction of different schedules and give both people room to decompress. The ability to retreat without having to physically leave the accommodation is worth more than the cost difference between a shared room and a private one.
Building in deliberate unstructured time is important for trips spanning more than a few days. A packed itinerary works well for a weekend but becomes exhausting over a longer trip, particularly if there is a significant age or energy difference between travellers. Mornings where everyone does what they feel like often produce some of the most remembered conversations of the trip, because no one is managing logistics or navigating a schedule.
Why the trip is always worth taking
The research on multigenerational travel consistently finds that these trips produce memories that outlast other kinds of holidays. The novelty of the destination matters less than the shared experience of navigating it together. Women who have taken mother-daughter trips describe them in remarkably similar terms: a shift in the relationship, a new kind of understanding, something that could not have happened at home.
For many, there is also a quality of completion to it, a sense of having done something rather than simply intended to. The trips that do not happen are the ones people tend to regret more than the trips that were imperfect. A multigenerational holiday does not have to be exotic or expensive or long. It has to be intentional. That is what makes the difference.
ALSO SEE:
Underrated coastal destinations that aren’t overrun by tourists yet
Featured Image: Pexels
