Fashion

The 16 Best Airbnbs for Solo Travel Around the World

A room of your own.

By Elliot O·May 12, 2026·2 min read
The 16 Best Airbnbs for Solo Travel Around the World

Reported by Vogue.

Solo travel has a mythology problem. The genre promises Eat Pray Love epiphanies and sun-drenched self-reinvention, but most of us just want a few uninterrupted days — good food, no negotiating, zero itinerary compromises. The secret to pulling it off well? The right place to sleep. According to Vogue, the best Airbnbs for solo travel span everything from a 17th-century Amsterdam canal house to a desert cabin in Joshua Tree, and they share one common thread: they make going alone feel like a choice worth repeating.

For first-timers, cities are the smartest entry point. A sunny one-bedroom in Rome's Trastevere drops you steps from Da Enzo — order the carbonara, drink the house wine, watch the street fill up. In Montreal, Fred Sahai, Vogue Shopping's associate commerce producer and a Montreal native, recommends basing yourself in a sprawling Mile End loft for a day of vintage browsing, solo café-hopping, and dinner at Buvette Chez Simone. London's converted Hackney warehouse puts eight Michelin-starred restaurants within walking distance, alongside a stocked bookshelf for when you'd rather stay in. Paris's Super Appartement, tucked into the buzzy Oberkampf neighborhood, offers the local experience that a hotel simply can't replicate.

For the Traveler Ready to Go Further

If you're past the training wheels phase, the options get more interesting. Lisbon's Antiga Casa Pessoa — designed by architect José Adrião — feels more like a private gallery than a rental, with 19th-century frescoes covering nearly every wall. A minimalist award-winning townhouse in Kyoto starts from $230 a night and delivers exactly the kind of spare, restorative aesthetic that makes you want to sit still. On the Greek island of Serifos — a quieter alternative to Mykonos — the Marietta House (from $108 per night) offers whitewashed floors, Aegean views, and a covered balcony tailor-made for doing absolutely nothing. And in Campeche, Mexico, a colorful colonial home with a private pool and fire pit offers the slower pace that overrun hotspots like Oaxaca can no longer credibly promise.

The outliers are worth flagging too. A hilltop treehouse in Costa Rica with a yoga deck runs from $371 a night for the traveler who wants genuine remoteness. Joshua Tree's Little Jo — a renovated 1950s homesteader cabin with an outdoor shower and record player — earns its place for stargazers and anyone who finds the desert genuinely restorative rather than just photogenic. Amsterdam's 1608 canal house on Singel Canal skips the full kitchen in favor of waterfront views and a burger recommendation (Kikkie van de Prinsensluis, right down the street). Copenhagen's Nordic apartment, a 10-minute walk from the city center, is the kind of place that makes you want to cook quiet meals and go to bed early — in the best possible way.

The solo trip you keep putting off doesn't need a dramatic occasion — it just needs the right address.


Read the original at Vogue.

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