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Questions Before You Make a Brilliant Decision?

Fair. Booking an international group trip is a big move. Here's everything you probably want to know before you start telling people, "Actually, I'm doing New Year's in Ireland."

FAQ SURVIVAL GUIDE

COME SOLO
That's kind of the point.
FLIGHTS SEPERATE
You book the flight.
We Handle the trip once you get there.
REAL HOTELS
No hosetl bunks.
No mystery bathrooms.
SOCIAL, NOT FORCED
No name-tag weirdness.
No clipboard energy.
READ THE TRIP PAGE
Each trip has its own dates, route, pickup details, and fine print.
ASK EARLY
Questions are easier before you buy flights, pack wrong, or panic-Google at midnight.
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Send us the thing you're wondering about. We'll help you figure out if this is your trip.
 
    • Still Out There is curated group travel for adults who still want adventure, connection, culture, and stories worth telling — just with better hotels and fewer questionable overnight buses.

      We build trips for people who have outgrown backpacker chaos, rejected retirement-tour energy, and still believe the world is a lot more interesting when you actually go see it.

    • Mostly adults in their 30s and 40s who want social, well-planned travel without feeling like they accidentally joined a spring break bus or a museum field trip with assigned seating.

      If you like good hotels, great places, local culture, live music, real food, and trips with a little personality, you’re probably in the right place.

    • Yes. That’s kind of the point.

      A lot of people still want to travel, but their old crew has become impossible to mobilize. Someone’s busy. Someone’s tired. Someone says “maybe next year,” which is usually where good ideas go to die.

      Come solo, bring a friend, bring a partner, or bring the one person in your group chat who still follows through. Either way, you won’t be doing this alone.

    • No. This is social group travel, not a dating show with luggage.

      Some guests may come solo, some with friends, some as couples. The goal is connection, not forced romance, awkward mixers, or name tags with too much emotional responsibility.

    • No. Ireland is our first trip, not our entire personality.

      We’re launching with Ireland because it has everything we love: wild landscapes, great towns, live music, local culture, excellent pubs, and scenery that makes people suddenly start talking like poets.

      But Still Out There is being built as a broader travel brand, with future trips planned across Europe and beyond.

    • The Ireland New Year’s trip is operated in partnership with Doc’s Tours, an experienced tour company that runs trips in Ireland, across Europe, and beyond.

      Doc’s Tours is also a partial owner of Still Out There, which means this is not some loose “we found a bus company on the internet” situation. They bring years of travel experience, destination knowledge, logistics, transportation planning, vendor relationships, and on-the-ground know-how.

      Still Out There brings the brand, the trip concept, the group experience, and the belief that grown-up travel should still have a pulse.

      Doc’s Tours brings the operational backbone to make sure the whole thing actually works.

      Translation: the trip has personality, but the logistics are not being held together with duct tape, optimism, and a guy named Seamus who “knows a driver.”

    • Yes.

      Still Out There’s founder has already planned and led successful group trips with Doc's Tours through Ireland for friends, family, and music-related travel groups. Those trips are a big part of why Still Out There exists in the first place.

      The idea was simple: the best trips were never just about the itinerary. They were about the people, the timing, the music, the unexpected moments, and the stories everyone was still telling years later.

      So now we’re building that feeling into a real travel brand.

    • We’re aiming for the sweet spot.

      Enough structure that the trip runs smoothly.
      Enough freedom that it does not feel like a school field trip.
      Enough social energy that people actually connect.
      Enough comfort that nobody is questioning their life choices in a bunk bed.

      We care about the route, the rhythm, the group dynamic, the nights out, the local texture, and the moments that make a trip feel alive.

    • It’s social, lively, and built around places with energy — music, pubs, nightlife, great food, and group moments that turn into stories.

      But it is not a sloppy party bus.

      Think grown-up adventure with a pulse: good hotels, real days, fun nights, and the freedom to join the action or take a quiet evening when your body politely files a complaint.

    • Still Out There is designed mainly for professionals in their 30s and 40s — people who still want adventure, connection, and big stories, but now prefer their trips with good hotels, smart logistics, and fewer “we’ll figure it out when we get there” disasters.

      That said, this is more about mindset than math.

      If the overall idea speaks to you — curated group travel, real culture, great nights out, new people, and the belief that “maybe next year” is a terrible life strategy — you’ll probably fit in just fine, regardless of the number on your driver’s license.

    • Nope.

      The whole idea is that you can show up without already having a full travel crew. We create the structure, the group rhythm, and the shared experiences that help people connect naturally.

      By the end, you’ll either have new friends, new stories, or at minimum a few people who can confirm that yes, that absolutely happened.

    • Booking for the Ireland New Year’s trip is handled through our official WeTravel booking page, operated in partnership with Doc’s Tours.

      That page will show the current pricing, room options, payment schedule, availability, cancellation terms, and all the official booking details. In other words, it’s where the fun becomes legally and financially real.

    • No. For the Ireland trip, payments are processed through WeTravel and Doc’s Tours.

      Still Out There is involved in the brand, concept, group experience, and trip design, while Doc’s Tours provides the operating experience, logistics, and booking infrastructure. This keeps the process secure, organized, and thankfully free of anyone Venmoing a guy named Steve for “Ireland money.”

    • Yes — your deposit secures your spot on the trip.

      Each Still Out There trip requires a minimum number of travelers in order to run. In the unlikely event that we do not reach the required minimum by our booking deadline, your deposit will be automatically refunded.

      Otherwise, once your deposit is paid and your booking is confirmed through WeTravel, your spot is locked in.

      Translation: your deposit gets you on the list. If the trip runs, you’re in. If we don’t hit the minimum, you get your money back and we all pretend to be emotionally mature about it.

    • Yes, the trip is expected to use a deposit-based booking structure. The deposit is non-refundable except in the unlikely event that the trip is cancelled.

      The exact deposit amount, payment deadlines, and balance due dates will be listed on the WeTravel booking page. Please review those details before booking so there are no surprises later, except the good kind involving scenery and live music.

    • Payment plan options will be shown on the WeTravel booking page.

      WeTravel is designed to handle trip payments, deposits, and scheduled balances, so you’ll be able to see the available options before committing.

    • The official cancellation and refund terms are listed on the WeTravel booking page.

      Please read them carefully before booking. We would love for every plan in life to be fully refundable, flexible, and emotionally supportive, but travel logistics unfortunately live in the real world with hotels, buses, vendors, and deadlines.

    • No. Flights are not included.

      Guests are responsible for booking their own flights to and from the tour pickup point. This gives you flexibility to arrive early, extend your stay, use points, upgrade yourself, or build a dramatic “I’m not ready to go home yet” side quest after the trip.

    • Travel insurance is strongly recommended.

      International travel has moving parts: flights, weather, illness, delays, luggage, and the occasional airline decision that feels personally disrespectful. A good travel insurance policy can help protect your investment and give you backup if something unexpected happens.

    • The exact inclusions are listed on the WeTravel booking page.

      Generally, each trip includes hotel accommodations, private coach transportation during the tour, scheduled attractions, select meals, daily breakfast where listed, host-led experiences, and the Still Out There amenity package.

    • Flights, travel insurance, personal expenses, some meals, drinks, optional activities, and departure-day airport transfers are not included unless specifically stated on the booking page.

      Basically: the core trip is handled. Your plane ticket, souvenirs, extra pints, and emotionally motivated airport snacks are on you.

    • For payment, reservation, or official booking questions, contact Doc’s Tours through the WeTravel booking page.

      For questions about the Still Out There concept, trip vibe, future trips, or whether this is the sign you’ve been waiting for, reach out to Still Out There directly.

    • No. Flights are not included.

      Guests book their own flights to and from the trip’s starting city. This gives you flexibility to use points, upgrade yourself, arrive early, stay longer, or build a small “I’m not ready to go home yet” side quest before returning to real life.

    • For most trips, we recommend arriving the day before the tour begins whenever possible.

      If you’re flying from the United States to Europe, remember that most transatlantic flights are overnight. That usually means you’ll need to depart the U.S. the day before your official arrival day in order to land on time.

      Each trip itinerary will list the required arrival window, pickup details, and when the group officially departs. Make sure your flight gets you there with enough time to clear customs, collect your bags, find the group, and get on the bus without turning the first day into an airport-based action movie.

      Arriving early gives you a softer landing, reduces flight-delay stress, and lets you start the trip like a functioning adult instead of someone who just spent eight hours folded into an economy seat questioning every decision they’ve ever made.

    • Each trip begins in a designated arrival city.

      For example, the Ireland New Year’s trip begins in Dublin, but future trips may begin in places like Edinburgh, Madrid, Palermo, Munich, Bangkok, or wherever the next excellent idea drags us.

      The exact starting location, airport guidance, and pickup details will be listed on the individual trip page.

    • It depends on the trip.

      Some Still Out There trips will start and end in the same city. Others may begin in one city and end somewhere else, because occasionally the best route does not care about round-trip airfare convenience.

      Each trip page will clearly list the starting city, ending city, and recommended flight plan before you book.

    • Yes, and we fully support this behavior.

      Many guests may choose to arrive early, recover from travel, explore the starting city, or extend their trip after the official itinerary ends. Depending on the destination, Still Out There and our operating partners may be able to help arrange pre-trip or post-trip extensions.

      Because sometimes the correct answer is not “go home.”

    • For international trips, yes.

      Make sure your passport is valid well before departure. Some countries also require your passport to be valid for several months beyond your travel dates, so this is one of those boring details worth checking early — ideally before you’re standing in your kitchen at midnight whispering, “Wait… when does this expire?”

      Make sure you have your ETIAS secured prior to departure for Europe and ETA secured for United Kingdom.

    • Most Still Out There trips are priced based on double occupancy, which means two guests sharing a room.

      If you’re coming solo and book a double-occupancy spot, we’ll pair you with a roommate of the same sex. You do not need to bring your own roommate to join the trip.

      If you prefer your own room, you can select a single supplement option when available. Single rooms are limited and usually cost extra, because apparently hotels still insist on charging money for privacy.

       

      If you book double occupancy, we’ll pair solo travelers with a same-sex roommate whenever possible, or you can choose a single supplement if you’d prefer your own room.

    • No. You are an adult with free will and possibly knees.

      There will be plenty of opportunities for group dinners, live music, pubs, nightlife, and wandering into the kind of night that starts with “just one” and ends with “we should write this down.”

      But if you need a quieter evening, take it. The trip is designed to have social momentum, not mandatory attendance.

    • Yes.

      We believe in a strong itinerary, not a hostage situation with scenic views. Each trip will have planned experiences, group moments, and host-led activities, but we also build in time to wander, shop, nap, grab coffee, sit somewhere beautiful, or pretend you’re the main character in a European street scene.

      The best trips need rhythm. Too much structure feels like school. Too little structure turns into eight people standing on a sidewalk Googling restaurants. We aim for the sweet spot.

    • Perfect. That’s one of the main reasons Still Out There exists.

      A lot of people want to travel, but they don’t want to wait around for their friends to coordinate PTO, childcare, spouses, budgets, and emotional readiness.

      Our trips are built so solo travelers can join a group, meet people naturally, and feel part of the experience without needing to already know anyone. You can arrive solo without spending the week alone.

    • Yes, but relax.

      This is not a corporate retreat. Nobody is making you share a fun fact while holding a stress ball.

      We use simple, low-pressure ways to help the group get to know each other early in the trip, because nobody wants to spend three days silently wondering who everyone is. The goal is connection without cringe.

    • No.

      Still Out There is social group travel, not a dating event. Some guests may come solo, some with friends, some as couples. The point is shared experience, not forced romance or awkward “so what are you looking for?” energy over breakfast.

      That said, if people meet naturally, fantastic. We are pro-story.

    • People who still want to go.

      Professionals, solo travelers, friend pairs, couples, and small groups who want something more interesting than a resort week and less exhausting than planning every detail themselves.

      They’re curious, social, independent, up for a good night out, and old enough to appreciate a proper hotel room after one.

    • You’ll be fine.

      The trips are social, but not aggressively social. You can join the group energy without being forced to become the mayor of the bus.

      Come to the dinners. Join the walks. Grab a drink with the group. Step away when you need to recharge. Nobody is keeping a participation spreadsheet.

    • That depends on you.

      Many Still Out There trips include nightlife, pubs, wine, beer, cocktails, music, and social evenings because those are often part of the local culture and, frankly, part of the fun.

      But drinking is optional. You can absolutely enjoy the trip without making alcohol your co-pilot. The point is the people, the places, the music, the food, and the experience — not whether you can keep up with someone who peaked during study abroad.

    • We use comfortable, well-located hotels that fit the route, the destination, and the style of the trip.

      The goal is simple: after a full day of exploring, eating, walking, laughing, riding, listening to music, and making excellent decisions with occasional consequences, you should have a proper room to come back to.

      No hostel bunks.
      No mystery bathrooms.
      No “it has character” situations where character means the elevator was installed during a monarchy.

    • Most Still Out There trips are priced based on double occupancy, which means two guests sharing a room.

      This keeps the trip more affordable and also helps with the social nature of the experience. You are not required to bring your own roommate, though. If you’re coming solo and book double occupancy, we’ll pair you with another solo traveler of the same sex whenever possible.

    • Yes, when available.

      Guests who prefer their own room can usually select a single supplement option during booking. Single rooms are limited and cost extra, because hotels apparently still insist on charging for privacy.

      If having your own room is important to you, book early. Single supplements tend to be one of the first things to disappear.

    • A single supplement is the additional cost for having your own room instead of sharing a double-occupancy room.

      Most group travel pricing is based on two people sharing a room. If you want the room to yourself, the hotel charges more, and that difference is reflected in the single supplement.

      In plain English: more space, more privacy, more money.

    • If you’re traveling with a friend, partner, or someone you trust not to turn the hotel room into a crime scene of unpacked luggage, yes — you can request to room together during booking.

      Roommate requests should be submitted as early as possible so we and our operating partners can plan accordingly.

    • That’s completely fine.

      If you book a double-occupancy spot as a solo traveler, we’ll work to pair you with a same-sex roommate. This is common on group trips and helps keep the cost down while still letting you join without needing to recruit someone from your group chat.

    • Whenever possible, yes.

      We aim for hotels that make sense for the route and give guests good access to the town, nightlife, restaurants, scenic areas, or the next day’s logistics. Sometimes that means being right in the action. Sometimes it means being slightly outside the madness so everyone can sleep like a person who has made at least one responsible choice.

    • For each trip, the listed hotels or hotel category will be included on the trip page whenever possible.

      For the Ireland New Year’s trip, the planned hotels are listed in the itinerary. Future trips will include accommodation details as they are finalized.

    • Many Still Out There trips include breakfast at the hotel, but it depends on the itinerary.

      Each trip page will clearly list which meals are included. We are big believers in starting the day with coffee, food, and at least a basic attempt at being human before getting back on the road.

    • Most Still Out There trips are moderately active.

      Expect walking tours, scenic stops, stairs, uneven streets, cobblestones, hills, exploring towns, getting on and off the coach, and the occasional “this view is worth the climb” situation.

      You do not need to be an athlete. You should be comfortable being on your feet, walking a few miles over the course of a day, and handling the kind of terrain old European towns created before anyone cared about ankle support.

    • No.

      These are travel adventures, not boot camps with better scenery.

      That said, you should be able to walk comfortably, manage stairs, and handle full days of moving around. Some days will be lighter, some days will involve more exploring, and some days your step count may surprise you in a way your smartwatch feels very smug about.

    • Some trips may include optional hikes, scenic walks, or more active excursions depending on the destination.

      For example, the Ireland trip includes the option to hike the Pilgrim’s Path at Slieve League, which is one of the more rugged experiences on that itinerary. If a trip includes a more serious hike or physical activity, we’ll call that out clearly on the trip page so nobody shows up in airport loafers and misplaced confidence.

    • Usually, yes.

      We build structure into the trip, but this is not gym class and nobody is taking attendance with a whistle.

      Some stops are part of the route, so you may still travel with the group even if you choose not to participate in a specific walk, hike, or activity. Whenever possible, you’ll have the option to sit something out, explore nearby, grab a coffee, or simply enjoy not climbing a hill because you are an adult and you can make your own choices.

    • Bring comfortable walking shoes. Real ones.

      Not brand-new shoes you are “still breaking in.”
      Not dress shoes pretending to be versatile.
      Not the sneakers you bought because they looked good in the airport mirror.

      For most trips, comfortable walking shoes are enough. For destinations with hikes, trails, cliffs, or uneven terrain, we recommend sturdy walking shoes or hiking boots.

      Your feet are important. They are how you get to the pubs, the views, the restaurants, and the questionable late-night decisions.

    • Yes, but in a normal travel way.

      You’ll walk through towns, historic areas, scenic viewpoints, old streets, markets, waterfronts, and neighborhoods worth exploring. Some days will be coach-heavy. Some days will be more active. The exact pace depends on the destination and itinerary.

      If your ideal trip involves being carried gently from one seated experience to another, this may not be the one. If you enjoy actually getting out into the place you came to see, you’ll be fine.

    • Generally, no — but they are not completely sedentary.

      Still Out There trips are designed for curious, mobile adults who want to experience a destination properly. That means walking, exploring, standing, occasionally climbing stairs, and sometimes dealing with old streets that were apparently designed by people who hated luggage wheels.

      We’ll identify any more demanding activities on the individual trip pages.

    • Reach out before booking.

      Some destinations, hotels, towns, and activities may be more accessible than others, especially in older cities, rural areas, coastal paths, or historic buildings. We’ll be honest about what the trip involves so you can decide whether it’s the right fit.

      The goal is not to scare anyone off. The goal is to make sure nobody discovers halfway up a cliff path that they accidentally booked the wrong adventure.

    • Because Ireland is basically cheating.

      It has everything Still Out There was built around: wild landscapes, great towns, live music, local culture, deep history, excellent pubs, and the kind of scenery that makes grown adults suddenly stare into the distance like they’re in a movie trailer.

      It also has the right rhythm for a first trip. You can move from dramatic cliffs to small villages to buzzing cities to music-filled pubs without the trip ever feeling like it’s dragging.

      There’s also a strong foundation behind it. Doc’s Tours brings years of experience operating trips in Ireland, across Europe, and beyond, along with the local knowledge, vendor relationships, and logistics experience needed to make a trip like this actually work.

      And on the Still Out There side, Ireland is personal. Our founder has already planned and led successful group trips through Ireland, and those trips helped inspire the company in the first place. They proved something important: when you combine the right route, the right people, the right music, and the right amount of Irish magic, a trip stops feeling like a vacation and starts feeling like a story.

      So yes, Ireland is first.

      Not because it’s the only place we’re going.

      Because it was the obvious place to begin.

    • The Ireland New Year’s trip runs from December 27, 2026 to January 3, 2027.

      You’ll arrive in Dublin on December 27, ring in 2027 on the edge of the Atlantic, and return home on January 3 with a suitcase full of clothes, souvenirs, and probably a few stories that require context.

    • The trip starts and ends in Dublin, Ireland.

      We begin in Dublin on December 27 and immediately head west to Donegal. The trip finishes back in Dublin on January 3 after a final night in Temple Bar.

    • The route is:

      Dublin → Donegal → Galway → Dingle → Kilkenny → Dublin

      It is designed to move across some of Ireland’s best scenery, music towns, coastal roads, historic stops, and social nights without feeling like you’re spending the entire trip trapped on a bus wondering what county you’re in.

    • New Year’s Eve is spent in Dingle, a remote Atlantic town in Ireland’s Gaeltacht.

      That means music, pubs, coastal scenery, Irish language and culture, and midnight in one of the most unique places in the country. This is the centerpiece of the trip — the night the whole itinerary has been building toward.

    • This is not a generic “see Ireland through a coach window” tour.

      You’ll still get the big scenery — Slieve League, the Cliffs of Moher, Slea Head Loop, Howth — but the trip is built around the full experience: music, towns, food, pubs, local stories, group energy, and the feeling of actually being in Ireland instead of just passing through it.

      It’s curated, social, scenic, and just loose enough for the good stories to happen.

    • The official inclusions are listed on the WeTravel booking page, but the Ireland trip generally includes:

      Hotel accommodations
      Private coach transportation during the tour
      Daily breakfast where listed
      Select group meals
      Scheduled attractions and scenic stops
      Still Out There host
      Local guide / driver
      Host-led evenings
      Still Out There amenity package
      New Year’s Eve experience in Dingle

      Basically, the core trip is handled. You just need to get yourself to Ireland and arrive ready to be a reasonably functioning member of society.

    • Flights and trip insurance are not included.

      Other items not included may include some lunches and dinners, drinks, personal expenses, travel insurance, optional activities, and your departure-day airport transfer unless specifically listed on the booking page.

      In other words: the big bones of the trip are covered. Your airport snacks, extra pints, souvenirs, and “I absolutely need this sweater” purchases are between you and your bank account.

    • Guests should arrive in Dublin either the night before or land before 10:00 AM on December 27, 2026.

      If you’re flying from the United States, remember that most flights to Ireland are overnight, which usually means departing the U.S. on December 26 to arrive on December 27.

      Please check your flight carefully. The goal is to start the trip on the coach, not sprinting through Dublin Airport with one shoe untied and a haunted look in your eyes.

      Remember you will need to secure both a European ETIAS for The Republic of Ireland and a UK ETA for The North of Ireland prior to traveling. 

    • We plan to offer two pickup options:

      Dublin Airport for guests arriving that morning
      Dublin city centre for guests arriving early or staying in Dublin the night before

      Exact pickup locations and times will be provided before the trip.

    • No group airport transfer is included on departure day.

      The trip ends after breakfast at The Temple Bar Hotel on January 3. Guests arrange their own transfer to Dublin Airport by taxi, ride share, or airport bus.

      Dublin makes this fairly easy, and your host can point you in the right direction before everyone begins the traditional “pretending we’re not sad to leave” lobby scene.

    • The Ireland trip is moderately active.

      Expect walking through towns, scenic stops, cobblestones, stairs, coastal paths, and optional hiking. The most active day is likely Slieve League, where guests who want a more rugged experience can take on the optional Pilgrim’s Path hike.

      You do not need to be an endurance athlete. You should be comfortable walking, exploring, and occasionally letting Ireland remind you that cliffs are not built with escalators.

    • The Ireland New Year’s trip is operated in partnership with Doc’s Tours, an experienced tour company that runs trips in Ireland, across Europe, and beyond.

      Doc’s Tours is also a partial owner of Still Out There, bringing years of travel experience, destination knowledge, logistics, transportation planning, vendor relationships, and on-the-ground know-how.

      The trip will be personally led by the founder of Still Out There, so the brand, the group experience, and the slightly unhinged commitment to making this trip memorable are all very much on board.

      Still Out There brings the concept, the personality, the route, and the belief that grown-up travel should still have a pulse.

      Doc’s Tours brings the operational backbone to make sure the whole thing actually works.

      Translation: the trip has personality, but the logistics are not being held together with duct tape, optimism, and a guy named Seamus who “knows a driver.”

    • No. Ireland is the first trip, not the whole story.

      Still Out There is being built as a broader group travel brand for adults who want curated adventures, great people, real culture, and trips that do not feel like they were assembled by a beige committee in a conference room.

      Ireland is where we’re starting.

      The world is where we’re going.

    • We’re planning trips built around places with energy: great cities, wild landscapes, strong food culture, music, nightlife, history, local character, and enough personality to justify the plane ticket.

      Think Europe, island routes, festivals, winter cities, summer coastlines, mountain towns, and the occasional destination that makes your responsible friends say, “Wait, you’re doing what?”

    • Future trips will be announced as they move from “excellent idea” to “actual dates, hotels, routes, and logistics.”

      We would love to announce everything immediately, but unfortunately travel planning involves calendars, vendors, buses, rooms, weather, local partners, and other details that do not respond well to pure enthusiasm.

      Join the mailing list and follow Still Out There to be the first to know when new trips open.

    • Yes — but each destination will have its own personality.

      The Still Out There formula stays the same: curated routes, good hotels, social momentum, local culture, great food, strong nights out, and enough flexibility for the trip to feel alive.

      But Scotland should not feel like Spain. Thailand should not feel like Austria. Colombia should not feel like Eastern Europe.

      Same brand. Different flavor. Better stories.

    • Absolutely.

      If there’s a place you think has Still Out There energy, send it our way. We are always collecting future trip ideas, especially the ones that sound slightly unreasonable until someone starts pricing flights.

      The best trips usually begin with someone saying, “This might be a terrible idea,” and then realizing it is actually a fantastic one with better logistics.

    • Yes.

      Join the mailing list and you’ll get updates when future trips are announced, early interest lists open, or booking goes live.

      This is the best way to get first shot at new destinations before the rest of the internet starts pretending they were always adventurous.

    • Generally, yes.

      Still Out There is designed mainly for professionals in their 30s and 40s, but the real filter is mindset. If you like the idea of social, curated group travel with culture, adventure, good hotels, and a little edge, you’ll probably fit in just fine.

    • Yes.

      That is a core part of the brand. Future trips will continue to be built for people who want to travel but do not want to wait around for their friends to finish “checking dates” for six months.

      Come solo, bring a friend, or bring the one person you know who still commits to plans like a functioning adult.

    • Mostly, but not necessarily forever.

      The main focus is international group travel, especially destinations with strong culture, scenery, food, nightlife, and history. But if a domestic or closer-to-home trip feels like it belongs in the Still Out There universe, we’re not above making excellent decisions locally.

      The rule is simple: it has to feel worth leaving the house for.

    • Yes.

      Many guests choose to arrive early, stay longer, or build a little extra adventure around the official trip dates. Depending on the destination, Still Out There and our operating partners may be able to help arrange pre-trip or post-trip extensions.

      Because sometimes the correct answer is not “go home immediately.”

    • It depends on the trip, but extensions could include extra hotel nights, additional city stays, private transfers, day tours, custom routing, or recommendations for where to go next.

      For example, after Ireland, you might add extra nights in Dublin, head north to Belfast, take the train to Cork, or build something custom.

      Every destination is different, but if you want to keep the trip going, ask us. We support this kind of behavior.

    • No.

      You are welcome to make your own pre-trip or post-trip plans. Some travelers like having everything handled. Others enjoy building their own side quest with questionable confidence and twelve open browser tabs.

      Both are valid.

      If you want help, we’ll point you in the right direction or connect you with the appropriate travel partner when possible.

    • Absolutely.

      In fact, please do. We would much rather help you understand the trip before you book than have you quietly wonder if this is the right fit while aggressively scrolling the FAQ at midnight.

      Use the contact form, email us, or reach out through the trip page.

    • For official booking, payment, deposit, rooming, or cancellation questions, use the contact options listed on the booking page.

      booking is handled through WeTravel in partnership with Doc’s Tours, so official reservation questions should go through that channel.

      For questions about the Still Out There concept, trip vibe, future trips, or whether this is your sign to finally stop waiting for your friends to commit, you can contact Still Out There directly.

    • Potentially, yes.

      If you have a group that wants a custom trip, private departure, milestone birthday, bachelor/bachelorette alternative, company retreat, friend-group adventure, or “we need something better than renting a house and arguing about dinner” situation, reach out.

      If it fits the Still Out There style, we’re open to talking.

    • Yes.

      Join the mailing list and you’ll get updates on future destinations, early interest lists, launch dates, and booking announcements.

      This is the best way to hear about upcoming trips before everyone else suddenly claims they were “definitely thinking about going.”

    • Send us a message.

      Tell us what you’re looking for, how you like to travel, and what you’re unsure about. We’ll give you an honest answer.

      Still Out There is not trying to be the right fit for everyone. It is trying to be exactly right for the people who get it.

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