Day One of Holiday - How to Prepare.

Day One of Holiday - How to Prepare.

Margaret Ryan on 20 Nov 2025

You’ve planned your holiday for months. You’ve booked the flights, packed and repacked your bag, made it through the airport and the long journey, and finally land at your destination. You step out of the terminal, tired and a bit irritable, and suddenly realise: now what? That first day can feel strangely directionless, especially when everyone’s patience is running low. The good news is that a little preparation before you leave can make Day One feel calm instead of chaotic, rather than a blur of decisions when you’re already exhausted.

Sort Your First Meals Before You Go

One of the simplest ways to make arrival easier is to plan how you’ll eat when you get there. Hunger and tiredness are not a great combo for decision-making. Book a restaurant for your first night. It doesn’t need to be fancy; the aim is simply to avoid the exhausted back-and-forth of “What do you feel like eating?” “I don’t know, what do you feel like?” “I don’t care…” At the end of a long travel day, no one wants to wander the streets scrolling through reviews, trying to agree on a place. Having one easy, walkable option already booked means you can drop your bags, freshen up and go straight to dinner.

If you’re staying in self-catering accommodation, find out where the nearest supermarket or corner shop is before you travel. Better yet, message your host in advance and ask if they can recommend a shop that will be open when you arrive, or if they’d be willing to leave a few basics in the accommodation for you – milk, bread, tea or coffee, maybe some fruit. Walking in the door and being able to make a quick drink or snack without hunting around a strange city is a small luxury that can completely change the tone of the day.

 

Get a Local’s Perspective Early

Book a walking tour with a local guide for your first full day . Think of it less as ticking off sights and more as a quick way to understand how the city really works.

A good guide will help you get your bearings and share insider tips: favourite neighbourhoods, great cafés and restaurants, easy routes to walk, and how things like tipping or tap water usually work. After a couple of hours with someone who lives there, you’re no longer just dropped in a new place; you’ve got a local’s perspective, a mental map and plenty of ideas for where to explore next.  Make sure you read the guide's reviews before booking

 

Think About Transport Before You Land

If you plan to use public transport, a bit of research before you go can save you a lot of confusion later.

Check how tickets work. In many countries you can’t buy a ticket on the bus or train itself. Instead, you have to purchase it from a vending machine, a kiosk or a local shop, and sometimes you need to validate it in a separate machine before you travel. Turning up tired and trying to decipher all this at a busy station is no one’s idea of fun.

Look up whether there are single tickets, day passes or multi-day passes, and which option makes sense for the length of your stay. Note where tickets can be bought and whether you need to validate them. With this tiny bit of preparation, you are suddenly not the confused tourist blocking the machine and holding up the queue.

If public transport really isn’t your style, or you know you’ll want taxis or ride-shares at least some of the time, check which apps operate in your destination. Uber might be the name everyone knows, but it isn’t available everywhere. Other services such as Grab, Bolt, inDrive or local taxi apps are common in many countries. Before you leave, find out which ones you can use, download them and set up your account. It’s also wise to look up a rough idea of what a normal fare from the airport to the city should cost, so you have a sense of what’s reasonable when you arrive.

Have Your Essentials Handy

There are a few other small actions that can make your first day smoother, and saving key information offline is one of them. Make sure you have your accommodation address written down, ideally in the local language as well, plus the phone number of your host or hotel. There are a lot of hotels with similar names in many cities, and you don’t want the awkward moment of being dropped at the wrong location simply because the driver heard the name slightly differently.

Pin your accommodation and a nearby supermarket, pharmacy and public transport stop on a map, and download offline maps if your app allows it. If you’re planning to use mobile data, try to organise an eSIM before you leave and have it set up ready to go on arrival. That way, you can use maps, translation and ride-share apps from the moment you step outside the airport.

 

From “Now What?” to “I’ve Got This”

With a bit of thought before you leave and a few gentle choices when you arrive, that anxious “now what?” moment at the airport can turn into quiet confidence. You know where you’re sleeping, how you’ll get dinner, roughly how to move around, and who to ask if you have questions.