Close Menu
RiderTourist
  • Home
  • Flights
  • Hotels
  • Tours
  • Car Rentals
  • Taxi
  • eSIM
  • Blog
    • Travel
    • Destinations
    • Vacations
    • Adventure
Our Posts
Adventure

The Essential Guide to Scotland’s North Coast 500

Travel

9 Best Travel Outfits to Wear on Your Next Trip | 2024 Picks

Destinations

What is Travel Insurance? – TravelFreak

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Important Pages:
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Affiliate Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Affiliate Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
RiderTourist
  • Home
  • Flights
  • Hotels
  • Tours
  • Car Rentals
  • Taxi
  • eSIM
Blog
RiderTourist
Blog
Home » Should You Quit School to Travel the World?
Vacations April 10, 2025

Should You Quit School to Travel the World?

Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
Should You Quit School to Travel the World?
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

Should You Quit School to Travel the World?
Why you can trust TravelFreak
  • 15+ years of travel experience
  • 550+ products tested
  • 40+ countries visited

We hold ourselves to a rigorous editorial standard. Financial incentives don’t sway our recommendations—experience and data do.

Read Our Editorial Policy

How do all-nighters spent camping under the Saharan sky’s swathing starlight, beneath the Northern Lights that illuminate Iceland’s horizon, or on the sandy shore of an iridescent sea of stars on the uninhabited Vaadhoo Island sound?

Exceedingly more enticing than all-nighters spent camping out in the library.

And the statistics book you’re reading in that library might not be the kind of content you feel like studying; you want to be exploring the ways of the world—its people and their many cultures.

Your abiding curiosity feeds your impetus for traveling, and quitting school to do it seems like an ideal move. But how do you know if the decision to quit is right for you and are you prepared to take that risk? Will you regret it?

Travel Is Valuable Education You Won’t Get in School

Speaking languages you’ve never heard, indulging in meals you’ve never tasted, partaking in religious customs you’ve never understood, dancing rhythms you’ve never danced—that’s all far more alluring and edifying than sitting in a classroom from which textbooks will predispose you to people with whom you’ve never engaged and places to which you’ve never been.

According to research commissioned by the U.S. Travel Association, these new experiences can actually improve cognitive health, too. Your brain actually reacts to unfamiliar, complex stimuli by forming new connections as it tries to categorize whatever it is that you’re taking in. This process develops the brain and keeps it active in a similar way as practicing a new hobby.

Quit school to travel? Iceland could be on your list.Quit school to travel? Iceland could be on your list.
Sheep grazing in Iceland.

Global travel company Contiki also recently published a study, “The Power of Travel,” which suggests that travel has some powerfully positive impacts on young people with regards to their self-confidence and how that impacts their educations and careers.

Sixty-three percent of the travelers studied said that their travel experiences have improved their education and employment. That’s because 75 percent of them said that they are more confident and can perform efficiently on many different tasks. 63 percent of them said that travel has helped their ability to solve problems efficiently, and a quarter of them said that they are more likely to set goals for themselves and regularly achieve them.

Traveling Could Teach You What You Want to Study in School Later

Traveling teaches you as much about yourself as it does about the place you’re visiting. Experiencing new things inevitably means discovering yourself and, when you’re off the grid and unencumbered by the burdens of everyday life (read: social media), you have time to reflect on those discoveries. It’s rejuvenating, really.

Traveling solo, in particular, can also quickly teach you your strengths, weaknesses, likes and dislikes—all of which will help you in school down the line. That’s because traveling unaccompanied in places where you’re ignorant of almost everything means you have only yourself on which to rely.

You have to have your own back, trust your own instincts and be your own pilot and co-pilot during times when you’re equipped with only the most rudimentary sense of how things work. It’s all challenging, but it’s equal parts enriching.

Traveling solo by train in the BalkansTraveling solo by train in the Balkans
Traveling solo by train in the Balkans.

Maybe you’ll discover that you’re really good at communicating and you decide to pursue studies in media. Maybe you’ll discover that you know how to keep your cool in stressful situations, and you decide to pursue psychology to help others do the same.

According to a study by Adam Galinsky, a Columbia Business School professor, travelers who’ve lived abroad are more creative, too. The more countries people live in, the more creative their work tends to be. This could also affect your school decisions, and maybe you’ll decide to chase a creative career in the arts because of it.

Traveling Will Change You in Ways School Never Will

Your travel experiences are immortal because the places you go will always become a part of you, and you will always look at the place to which you return with new eyes.

In other words: You don’t realize what you have until it’s gone—or you’re gone from it. Traveling to places that have less by your personal standards? It will inevitably make you more appreciative of the people and things you treasure.

Likewise, traveling to places where people seem to have more, or eat better, or meditate and pray better, or balance work and life better, etc. might ignite a fire under you to obtain the same quality of life upon your return.

Besides, when you’re at home in your dorm, in a classroom, on campus or wherever it may be, your responses to different cultures are very often molded by the company you keep. And you consciously or subconsciously temper your curiosity because of that.

Whether or not you quit school to travel, you can still make time to visit the Wadi Rum desert!Whether or not you quit school to travel, you can still make time to visit the Wadi Rum desert!
Whether or not you quit school to travel, you can still make time to visit the Wadi Rum desert in Jordan!

Traveling opens your eyes and arms with modesty and empathy; the more we understand each other’s inimitable lives, cultures and adversities, the more mindful of one another we become.

Science has even proved it time and time again. For example, in the aforementioned Contiki study, three quarters of travelers also said that travel has created an awareness of other cultures. This has led to increased tolerance and/or compassion. And well more than half said they often feel a sense of kinship with people from different ethnic groups.

Research lead by German scientists also found that students who had studied abroad for at least one semester tend to show an increase in open-mindedness toward new experiences, cordiality and emotional stability.

But Degrees Open Doors…

The job market is a tough place for those without degrees. But you wouldn’t be alone—just over a third of American adults have a four-year college degree, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. This number is the highest ever recorded, but it also means that not everyone goes to or finishes school.

Personal finance magazine Kiplinger conducts a yearly search of the most lucrative college majors out of 215 common options. In collaboration with PayScale and Economic Modeling Specialists International, Kiplinger looked at the average starting salary (less than five years’ work experience) and median salary (at least 10 years’ work experience) for each major and analyzed the projected 10-year job growth for each field.

Travel to the famous Angkor temples in CambodiaTravel to the famous Angkor temples in Cambodia
Travel to the famous Angkor temples in Cambodia.

There are lucrative, longevity-promising fields in which having a degree would be wise. These include actuarial mathematics, physicals, business administration, finance and economics, information security, computer science, information systems, nursing, biomedical engineering, mechanical engineering and civil engineering, according to the research.

Employers are certainly hiring in those fields. And they’re going to college campuses to recruit for open positions within their companies. According to NACE’s Job Outlook 2017 Spring Update, more than three-quarters of employers plan to be on campus recruiting for both full-time and intern/co-op positions in 2018. Slightly more than 99 percent of them have indicated plans to hire bachelor’s degree graduates, 53 percent are anticipating hiring M.B.A.s and 58 percent are planning to hire graduates with other master’s degrees.

So, in other words, not having a degree of any level might make competition that much stiffer for you.

And You Might Lose Motivation to Pursue School Later

If you postpone school, it might be more difficult for you to hop back into student mode later on if you decide you want to go back. Think about it: You’ll have to relearn how to be a student, and that’s not even always easy the first time around, let alone a second time. You’ll also have to readjust to all the nuances of the academic world, like AP writing style guidelines and standardized tests.

Speaking of tests, you may also have to retake tests (or even classes) that can actually expire; if you’re gone long enough, the school to which you’re applying might want to see more recent grades. And it’ll be hard to muster up the motivation to take those tests when you’ve forgotten much of the material.

On top of feeling unenthusiastic about sitting in classrooms again, or retaking tests to even be permitted to sit in those classrooms again, you’ll also be among the older students in your classes depending on how much time you take off.

Age might not bother you. But it may pose challenges such as making it more difficult to find common interests with others on campus. And friends are the support systems that keep a lot of people motivated—and that make school arguably more bearable.

The Fact is, You Don’t Need to Quit to Still Travel

It’s really quite unnecessary to quit school entirely to travel. You do have the option to travel the world while still studying. Or travel the world during breaks from your studies.

One option is to take a gap year. They’re not quite as common in America as they are in Europe, Australia and other parts of the world. But they’re an ideal alternative to quitting school. You can take 12 months to pursue non-academic goals while backpacking, working abroad or volunteering.

Another option is to earn college credits in abroad programs. Or take online classes with your home institution while traveling. Most offer programs that allow students to spend entire semesters or years in other countries. In fact, the number of students in the U.S. who studied abroad for credit during the 2015 to 2016 academic year grew 3.8 percent, according to the Association of International Educators, so it’s a popular route.

Sarande, AlbaniaSarande, Albania
Looking out over the Albanian coast in Sarande.

Prefer to travel all over on your own? As opposed to traveling with a program to live and immerse yourself in one new country. You might want to consider taking online classes that are available. This way you can still earn credits anywhere with a Wi-Fi connection. Just make sure you’ve got enough willpower to log in to your classes. Even despite how much you really feel like exploring. Or surfing. Skiing. Hiking. Eating out or whatever else it is that’s tantalizing you that day.

Otherwise, utilize your allotted time off to travel. Students are typically offered months off. They get them in the summer and during the holidays in the winter. And they also get a week or two during the spring. Take those breaks to quench your wanderlust and hold you over until the next one.

But, Ultimately, It’s Up to You

Ultimately, the choice is yours. But you’ll want to take into consideration everything we’ve talked about so far. It’s up to you to weigh the pros and cons depending on your own unique situation and values.

Do you typically struggle to find motivation? Think you’ll have trouble getting back into the swing of things later on? You may want to reconsider quitting school altogether. Already have a job lined up after school? The line of work you’re pursuing doesn’t require a degree? It doesn’t place preference on applicants with degrees? Then quitting school might not be as difficult a decision.

Regardless, regret nothing. Whatever you decide to do, you’ll come out of your school or travel experience a wiser, hopefully more mature and better-equipped human.

And it’s what you do with your knowledge after all of it that really counts.

READ NEXT: The Best Travel Tips I’ve Learned

About the Author

AnnaMarie Houlis

AnnaMarie Houlis is a multimedia journalist and an adventure aficionado with an affinity for solo travel. She’s an editor by day and a travel blogger at HerReport.org by night.

More Articles »

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
Previous ArticleThe Ultimate Big Sur Road Trip Itinerary & Best Viewpoints
Next Article Julia Barretto and Maya Make History with the World’s First-Ever Savings Calendar Girl 

Related Posts

Vacations

15 Breathtaking Things to do in Yosemite National Park

Vacations

17 Cool Places to Visit in the US in 2020

Vacations

Top 10 Most Dangerous Islands on Earth

Vacations

You Won’t Believe These Places are in the US

Vacations

15 Unforgettable Trips for People Over Age 50

Vacations

Your Only Chance To See This Spectacular Rare Natural Wonder Is In February

Vacations

15 Great Things to do in Sequoia National Park and Kings Canyon National Park

Vacations

Why Do People Travel? 7 Ways the World Will Change Your Perspective

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
Categories
  • Adventure (34)
  • Culture (8)
  • Destinations (80)
  • Travel (81)
  • Vacations (34)
Top Posts
Vacations
Vacations April 4, 2025

A Zestful Ride Through The Himalayan Highs

Himalayan highs They say the Himalayas call you back. I understood this in last one…

26 Best Hotels Near Joshua Tree National Park

May 17, 2025

Everything You Need To Know About The Good Beach Lagos

April 8, 2025

The Ultimate Route 66 Road Trip Guide

March 28, 2025

20 Expert Packing Tips for Stress-Free Travel

April 6, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get The Latest News, Updates, And Amazing Offers

Search and compare prices from hundreds of travel providers with one easy search. With our advanced search technology, you’ll find the best prices on hotels, flights, and much more.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Main Menu:
  • Home
  • Flights
  • Hotels
  • Tours
  • Car Rentals
  • Taxi
  • eSIM
Blog Categories
  • Adventure (34)
  • Culture (8)
  • Destinations (80)
  • Travel (81)
  • Vacations (34)

Subscribe

Get The Latest News, Updates, And Amazing Offers

© 2025 RiderTourist.
  • Home
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Affiliate Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.