
Why I Chose the Backpacker Life
I didn’t have much money, but I had this huge desire to really live. I wanted adventure. I wanted to have the time of my life, meet wild people, and wake up surrounded by nature not concrete.
That’s when I found backpacking. And honestly, it changed everything.
Backpacking gives you the freedom to travel for months with just a small budget. No need for luxury hotels or fancy restaurants just a backpack, an open mind, and a desire to explore.
You learn to manage your money, but more importantly, you learn how little you actually need to feel truly alive.
Some of my best memories happened in the cheapest hostels, surrounded by strangers who became friends, laughing until sunrise. I’ve shared food with locals, hitchhiked through mountains, and danced on beaches with people from every corner of the world.
When you backpack, you stop being a tourist and start becoming part of the places you visit. You’re not just watching life you’re living it.

Why Backpacking Is Cheap (and Still Feels Like Luxury)
One of the best things about backpacking? It’s cheap as hell — but somehow, it feels like the richest experience you can have.
You’ll sleep in hostels tucked away in regular neighborhoods, off the tourist trail. Sometimes for 4.50 dollars a night. Yep, that’s a real price in places like Indonesia or Vietnam.
You’ll walk out the door and eat a full local meal for another 3 dollars — spicy noodles, fresh fruit juices, grilled fish, whatever the locals are having.
Then maybe you rent a scooter for the day, which costs you 5 dollars. And suddenly, you’re riding along a jungle road, chasing waterfalls, or watching the
sunset over a quiet beach where you’re the only foreigner in sight. By the end of the day, you’ve spent maybe €20 total. You’ve eaten like a king, explored like an adventurer, and slept like a free soul. No 5-star hotel or overpriced tour could beat that feeling.
And it’s not just about the money. It’s about the value.
What’s more priceless than waking up on a beach in Lombok, hopping on your scooter, and seeing monkeys cross your path on a mountain road? Having lunch in a tiny local spot while kids surround you, laughing, curious, asking where you’re from, like you’re some kind of alien dropped into their world.
Then someone invites you to their house, and suddenly, you’re learning how they live, what they eat, how they think. All of that all of that for the price of a cheap dinner back home.
That’s the magic. With just your backpack, your sandals, and a curious mind, you get to live stories you’ll remember for life on a budget that’s more than real.
How to Plan Your Backpacking Route (Without Losing Your Mind)
So, you’re about to take your first big adventure — and now you’re wondering:
“How do I plan my backpacking trip?”
Here’s the truth:
The best way to plan your backpacking route… is to not overplan it.
Seriously. Backpacking is about freedom, not strict schedules.
And that’s the magic of it.
Here’s the rule: don’t stress. Seriously. No overthinking. Grab your Google Maps, open that thing up and ask yourself
👉 Which places do I REALLY wanna see no matter what?

´´Just getting started with your first backpacking trip? 👉 Don’t missBackpacking Tips As A Beginner, Avoid These Common Mistakes. Trust me.
You land. You check into your first hostel. You chill. You explore. You vibe with the place? Stay another night. Don’t feel it? Bounce. Go wherever feels right. That’s the freedom backpacking gives you.
No rush. No alarms. No strict schedule.
– Planning every minute is a rookie mistake. Like saying:
“Okay, two days in City A, then two in City B, then at 5:30 AM on Thursday I take a boat to Island C…”
Bro… no.
Because guess what? You’re going to wild places Southeast Asia, Alaska, remote islands, volcanic zones. You think the weather cares about your perfect plan? Nah.
One day you’ll wake up to a tropical storm that cancels your ferry.
Another day, a landslide blocks the road to that waterfall you wanted to see.
Or you’ll meet someone amazing at your hostel with a completely different plan… and you’ll want to follow them.
That’s not a setback that’s the beauty of this lifestyle.
Backpacking is not about checking boxes. It’s about flowing with the trip, with the people, with the weather, with the random events. It’s about making the most out of what each day gives you.
You’ll sleep in places for 3€ a night, wake up in front of beaches that look like postcards, and ride a scooter through jungles with monkeys chasing you.
Why ruin that by stressing over catching a boat you booked a week ago?
Here’s the golden rule:
👉 Have a list of 5–10 places you’d love to see. Start with one.
If you love it, stay.
If not, move on.
Meet people. Let their plans inspire yours. Eat the food, get lost, figure stuff out on the fly.
You’re not a tourist with an agenda. You’re a nomad with curiosity.
And yeah, problems will happen. Boats get canceled. Plans fall through. But you adapt. That’s how you become a real traveler — by rolling with the punches and still smiling.
So forget perfection. Travel light. Travel smart. And above all… stay flexible
Check this video because have the exact vibes of this post¡