How to Plan a Multi-Generational Family Trip That Actually Works

Plan 12-18 months ahead with input from all generations on destination, accommodation, and pace. Book connecting rooms or vacation rentals with common areas. Build in downtime, flexibility, and activities for different energy levels.

  1. Get everyone's input early. Send a survey 12-18 months out asking about dream destinations, deal-breakers, mobility needs, and budget comfort zones. Include grandparents, parents, and kids old enough to have opinions. Use their answers to narrow down 3-5 realistic options.
  2. Choose accommodations that keep families together but not too together. Book connecting hotel rooms, vacation rental houses with multiple bedrooms, or resort suites with separate sleeping areas. Everyone needs their own space to retreat to. Shared kitchens and living areas are essential for family time without restaurant pressure every meal.
  3. Plan for the slowest walker. Base your daily pace on grandparents or anyone with mobility limitations. Plan 2-3 activities max per day with 2-3 hour breaks between. Choose destinations with good public transport or rent a large vehicle if driving.
  4. Create age-appropriate activity tracks. Plan parallel activities that can split and merge. While teens do a hiking trail, grandparents visit the museum cafe. Meet for lunch. While grandparents nap, parents take kids to the playground. Everyone meets for dinner.
  5. Build in solo parent time. Give parents breaks by having grandparents watch kids for 2-3 hours every other day. Parents get date time, grandparents get focused grandchild bonding, kids get spoiled. Schedule this upfront so everyone expects it.
  6. Plan travel logistics around the most complicated family member. If someone needs wheelchair assistance, book that for the whole group. If someone has dietary restrictions, research restaurants ahead. If someone gets carsick, plan frequent stops. The whole group moves at the speed of the person who needs the most support.
How do we handle different sleep schedules?
Book accommodations where early risers can make coffee and late sleepers can sleep in without disturbing each other. Plan morning activities for the early birds, afternoon activities for everyone, and optional evening activities for night owls.
What if family members have mobility issues?
Choose destinations with good accessibility, book ground-floor or elevator-accessible rooms, rent mobility aids if needed, and plan rest stops every 2-3 hours. Many destinations offer mobility equipment rentals and accessible tour options.
How do we manage different budgets across generations?
Discuss financial expectations upfront and agree on who pays for what. Often grandparents cover accommodation, parents cover activities, and everyone pays their own meals. Set clear expectations before booking anything.
What if someone gets sick during the trip?
Travel with comprehensive health insurance for all family members, bring a well-stocked first aid kit, research medical facilities at your destination, and have a plan for who stays with sick family members while others continue activities.