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The hidden realities of LGBTQ+ travel revealed

New research published by the National Library of Medicine reveals that travel can be uplifting and liberating, but for LGBTIQ+ travellers, it’s rarely straightforward. The experience is often shaped by questions of safety, personal identity and whether a destination feels truly welcoming.

THIS ARTICLE AT A GLANCE

  • Study on LGB+ travellers and how identity shapes travel experiences.
  • Heteronormativity affects travel at personal, social & structural levels.
  • Safety and local attitudes influence destination choice.
  • Travel can support well-being and coping for LGB people.
  • Research shows travel is not a neutral experience for many queer people.

The new findings highlight what most LGBTIQ+ people already know: that going on a holiday and where you go is about much more than flights, hotels and holiday snaps.

Travel is often sold as the perfect way to escape, reset and relax from a busy, demanding life, but for LGB+ people, it can also mean constant assessment, which can negatively impact the experience. A study on LGB+ travellers published by the U.S. National Library of Medicine shows how identity shapes everything from destination choice to how safe and welcome someone feels once they arrive.

The broader research around queer travel says heteronormativity still plays a major role in how people move through the world. In one study of LGBTIQ+ travellers, researchers found that intrapersonal, interpersonal and structural forms of heteronormativity all affected travel constraints, from personal worries to outside pressures and wider social rules.

"For many queer travellers, the simple question isn’t just where to go, but whether they can truly relax once they get there."

That matters because travel should be about ease, not code-switching. For many queer travellers, the simple question is not just where to go, but whether they can relax once they get there. Safety, visibility and local attitudes can all shape whether a trip feels like a break or a risk.

Research also suggests travel can still be a positive force. Studies have found that queer travellers use travel to support well-being, self-development and coping with prejudice, which helps explain why holiday plans can carry emotional weight beyond leisure.

Travel for LGBTIQ+ people is deeply personal and shaped by far more than logistics or leisure. While progress has been made, the need for safety, affirmation and belonging remains central. As research continues to highlight these nuanced experiences, it’s clear that creating truly inclusive travel opportunities requires ongoing awareness — so that every journey can offer the freedom, joy and rest it promises.

This article was orginally published by FUSE Magazine

 

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