logo
I'm a female solo traveller - here's how to holiday in the world's richest country on a budget

I'm a female solo traveller - here's how to holiday in the world's richest country on a budget

Daily Mail​13 hours ago
A seasoned female solo traveller has revealed six ways to explore the world's richest country without breaking the bank.
Known for its glitzy casinos, yacht-lined harbours and prestigious events, Monaco has a long-standing reputation for being the ultimate playground for the rich and famous.
More than seven million people flock to the sovereign state each year, many of which are day-trippers visiting famed attractions such as the Monaco Grand Prix and the Casino de Monte-Carlo.
As of 2025, Monaco's GBP per capita in 2024 stands at $227,073 (£182,467) - making it the wealthiest country in the world, according to World Population Review.
Despite its overwhelming opulence, the majority of residents are not necessarily affluent, which means getting the full experience while visiting the costly country can be surprisingly affordable with a few simple hacks.
Camille Esteve, a solo traveller and writer for Monaco Tribune, laid out her top tips on how to dine, sleep, shop and lap up luxury for less in Monaco.
Booking
According to Camille, choosing the right time of year is crucial for finding cheap prices in Monaco due to high demand during peak seasons, like the Monaco Grand Prix and summer months.
Despite its overwhelming opulence, the majority of residents are not necessarily affluent, which means getting the full experience while visiting the costly country can be surprisingly affordable with a few simple hacks
Off-peak seasons, such as November or other colder months, offer more affordable options for flights and accommodations.
She added: 'Plan your visit in September or October when you can enjoy the Indian summer, or between November and April, since the climate is still mild.'
Accommodation
A one-night stay at a hotel in Monte Carlo can cost more than the average person's monthly rent.
Fortunately, Monaco is surrounded by the French border and all of its quaint, wallet-friendly towns.
The solo traveller suggests booking accommodation in places like Beausoleil, Cap d'Ail or Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, and arrive in minutes to the Principality by foot.
Food
Rather than splurge on high-end dinners at celebrity chef restaurants, Camille chose to take advantage of Monaco's affordable lunch menus, where many upscale establishments offer three-course meals for under €30 (£26).
For a reasonably priced, gourmet local meal, she recommends La Condamine market.
Located at the foot of the Rock, on the Place d'Armes, this market is a popular gathering spot for local workers and their families.
Inside the food hall, numerous stalls serve Mediterranean specialties prepared with local ingredients at low prices - Italian pasta, fish, socca (chickpea pancakes), pissaladière (a type of pizza), pizzas, roast meats, and Lebanese cuisine are all available to eat in or take away.
Transportation
Although Monaco's streets are often peppered with Lamborghinis and Ferraris, Camille explored the compact two-square-kilometre principality either on foot or by using public lifts and buses, which cost as little as €1.50 (£1.30).
She noted that some destinations might appear to require a steep climb, but are actually reachable by lift - though these are sometimes discreetly located.
Visitors are advised to look for signage or ask locals for help.
For rainy days or tired feet, Monaco offers an excellent bus network, with single tickets, valid for 30 minutes, costing €1.50.
These can be purchased via the free Monapass app or by tapping a bank card directly on the terminal inside the bus (up to five uses per day, with one card per person).
To navigate efficiently, she recommended the Citymapper app, which provides precise directions, including which bus to take and where to disembark.
Sights and activities
Monaco can be fully enjoyed without spending a fortune at the Casino, as the principality offers a variety of culturally significant sites and attractions that are either free or available at a very low cost.
Notable landmarks include Monaco Cathedral, the Saint-Martin gardens, Place du Palais (where the changing of the Prince's Carabinieri guard takes place daily at 11:55 am), the Palais de Justice, the Princess Grace Irish Library, and Fort Antoine (excluding showtimes).
Alternatively, the Casino Gardens, The he Japanese Garden, The Métropole Shopping Centre and The New National Museum of Monaco (Villa Paloma and Villa Sauber) are some great free and affordable options.
Shopping and souvenirs
One traveller shared on their blog that they preferred to spend spare euros on day trips to nearby towns rather than new clothes.
However, for those inspired by the opulent fashion of Monaco's well-dressed residents, Le Port is a more budget-friendly area for shopping compared to Monte Carlo.
Prices tend to start lower there, and occasional discounts can create the sense of finding a real bargain.
As for souvenirs, affordable options are plentiful in Monaco's historic district, with shirts costing less than ten euros.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pope Leo XIV gets rock star welcome from young Catholics at huge vigil
Pope Leo XIV gets rock star welcome from young Catholics at huge vigil

The Guardian

time31 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Pope Leo XIV gets rock star welcome from young Catholics at huge vigil

Hundreds of thousands of young faithful feted Pope Leo XIV like a rock star on Saturday at an open-air prayer vigil outside Rome, after the head of the Catholic church made a dramatic entrance by helicopter. Pilgrims began crying and cheering when the white military helicopter descended over the sprawling site in Rome's eastern outskirts. Organisers said more than 800,000 young pilgrims from 146 countries around the world had assembled as part of a Jubilee of Youth – and perhaps as many as 1 million. Smiling from his popemobile, the first US pope waved to throngs of screaming young people lining his route, many running for a better vantage point. They had already spent the day in the hot sun listening to music, praying and talking with fellow Catholics. 'The pope is here' announced an excited voice over the public address to thunderous applause from the crowd. But the tenor of the event became more solemn and contemplative as the pope took to the stage, carrying a large wood cross. 'Dear young people, after walking, praying and sharing these days of grace of the Jubilee dedicated to you, we now gather together in the light of the advancing evening to keep vigil together,' Leo, 69, told them. In the crowd was French pilgrim Julie Mortier, 18, whose voice was hoarse from singing and screaming for hours. 'We're too happy to be here. Seeing the pope, that's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,' she said. Event organisers said people had continued to arrive during the vigil and that it was possible that attendance numbers had reached 1 million. Most pilgrims said they would camp overnight for a Sunday morning mass at the site led by Leo. That will mark the culmination of the week-long youth pilgrimage, a key event in the Catholic church's Jubilee holy year. Some in the crowd were so far away they could not see the massive stage with a golden arch and towering cross that dominated the open area – which at more than 500,000 sq m was the size of about 70 football fields. 'I'm so happy to be here, even if I'm a bit far from the pope. I knew what to expect,' British student Andy Hewellyn said. 'The main thing is that we're all together,' he said ahead of the pope's appearance, as other young people nearby played guitars, sang or snoozed in the sun. Italian broadcaster Rai called the event a Catholic 'Woodstock', as throughout the day nearly two dozen musical and dance groups, many of them religious, entertained the crowds. In a video message, Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni welcomed pilgrims to the capital, who were 'praying, singing, joking among themselves, celebrating in an extraordinary party'. The Jubilee of Youth, which began on Monday, comes nearly three months after the start of Leo's papacy, and 25 years after the last such massive youth gathering in Rome under Poland's pope John Paul II. Early on Saturday, groups of young people set off from central Rome for the venue in Tor Vergata. They were ready to spend the next 24 hours surrounded by a crowd of people and sleep under the stars. Victoria Perez, who carried a Spanish flag, could not contain her excitement at seeing 'the pope up close'. 'It's the first time I'm going to see him, and I can't wait,' the 21-year-old said, looking forward to a 'night of prayers under the stars'. French pilgrim Quentin Remaury, 26, said he had been inspired by the late pope Francis's rousing message to youth during a 2016 visit to Krakow, Poland. 'Pope Francis told us to 'get off your couches', and that really gave me a boost,' he said. Throughout the week, attenders participated in church-planned events, such as confession at Circus Maximus, one of Rome's top tourist spots. On Friday, about 1,000 priests were on hand, with 200 white gazebos serving as makeshift confessionals lining the hippodrome where chariot races were once held in Ancient Rome. The pilgrimage unfolds as under-30s navigate economic uncertainty, the climate crisis and international conflict, with some pilgrims travelling from war-torn areas such as Syria and Ukraine. Samarei Semos, 29, who said she had travelled three days from her native Belize to get to Rome, said she hoped Leo would have a strong say about 'third world countries'. The Vatican said that before the vigil the pope had met and prayed with travellers accompanying an 18-year-old Egyptian pilgrim who died on Friday night. Rai News reported that the young woman had died of a heart attack on a bus while returning to her lodging from an event in Rome. Amid tight security, more than 4,300 volunteers and more than 1,000 police were watching over the vigil, organisers said.

Laura Hamilton hits back at cruel troll who said she was 'too old' to wear bikinis as she shares a glimpse from her lavish holiday
Laura Hamilton hits back at cruel troll who said she was 'too old' to wear bikinis as she shares a glimpse from her lavish holiday

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Laura Hamilton hits back at cruel troll who said she was 'too old' to wear bikinis as she shares a glimpse from her lavish holiday

Laura Hamilton has hit back at a cruel troll who said she was 'too old' to wear bikinis as she shared a glimpse from her lavish holiday. The A Place In The Sun star, 43, has been enjoying a family holiday at Forte Village resort in South Sardinia. Joined by her children Rocco, 11, and Tahlia, 10 - who she shares with ex-husband Alex Goward - Laura has shared an array of gorgeous snaps as she soaked up the Italian sun. However, the blonde beauty was forced to hit back at a comment from one follower who cruelly said she was too old to wear a bikini. In a clip shared to Instagram, Laura was sat poolside as she flaunted her incredible figure in a blue and white swimsuit. She lounged on a day bed with her daughter as they waved while the camera panned out. In a caption, Laura made a poignant jibe at the troll as she penned: 'Who decides when we're 'too old' for anything? 'I recently read a comment saying I was too old to wear a bikini… and it honestly made me stop and think for a second. 'But then I reminded myself, life's way too short to worry about what other people think. 'Today I'm wearing a swimsuit, not because of the comment I read but because I wanted to and I feel comfortable in it!' 'We all have days when we feel self-conscious, but we deserve to enjoy the sunshine, the beach, the pool, whatever makes us happy, no matter our age and whether we choose to wear a swimsuit or a bikini!! 'Live your life and feel good in your own skin' Fans flocked to comments on her post as many were shocked by the troll's unkind remarks. Comments included: 'You keep going and you look amazing. While you've got it flaunt it'; 'Today I'm wearing a swimsuit, not because of the comment I read but because I wanted to and I feel comfortable in it,' she penned 'Absolutely not! Bikinis don't come with age restrictions—just confidence requirements! The only age limit is the age you stop caring what other people think'; 'People that say negative comments are just jealous! Do whatever makes you feel happy'; 'Wow, glad you didn't listen, some people should keep their comments to themselves. We are all different and we should do and wear what makes us happy.' Earlier this year, Laura revealed that she went on a date with Shaggy - and he made her pay. Laura, who split from husband Alex Goward, 44, in 2022 after a decade of marriage, shared details about her dating life in a new interview on Friday. Speaking exclusively to DailyMail Laura confirmed that she was still single and having fun as she recalled a surprise date from over 20 years ago. Recounting meeting up with Shaggy, she explained: 'I met him for coffee and I had to pay for it. It was at Heathrow airport. 'I'd been working with him, and he said, 'I really want to meet up with you and talk about work opportunities.'' As she soaked up the sun, the blonde beauty hit back at a comment from a follower who said she was too old to wear a bikini Confirming that he made up a song and sang it to her, she continued: 'God, that was over 20 years ago. I'm not sure he'd recognise me now.' Adding of her dating life now, Laura said: 'I'm busy working and dating and having fun, and I prefer to find people naturally rather than being on dating apps. 'I like to go out and meet people who have common interests. I made a decision going forward that I want to keep that aspect of my life private. 'I think it's really important that if I'm dating people - and I have been dating people - if they're not in the public eye, then they have a right to privacy. 'Just because I'm in the public eye – you never know what their job is, and they might need privacy for security reasons, and so I'm always mindful of that.' Laura shares two children Rocco, 12, and Tahlia, 10, with her ex-husband Alex, they split after 13 years together. In a statement at the time, she wrote: 'This isn't something I ever thought I'd be saying but, after 13 years of being together Alex and I have separated. 'Our children are and always will be our number one priority and we would respect privacy for our family at this time.' She has been a presenter on A Place in the Sun since 2012 and regularly posts pictures from her sun drenched holidays and filming trips on Instagram. Laura also explained that her time on the Channel 4 show has seen her through so many life changes, notably her engagement, the births of her children and her divorce. The former Dancing On Ice star described feeling like she had 'failed' amid their separation, which saw Laura move out of the couple's Surrey family home. She said: 'We are co-parenting, and it works. But even that, you know, I kind of felt like I had failed.'

And so to Vienna, the last waltz on my epic Grand Tour
And so to Vienna, the last waltz on my epic Grand Tour

Times

time5 hours ago

  • Times

And so to Vienna, the last waltz on my epic Grand Tour

I'm not sure why the British ambassador to Austria agreed to meet me. I hadn't even sent a letter of introduction from a reputable sponsor, as Grand Tourists once did, begging diplomats for an audience in the cities they visited. 'A young man with limited German,' mine would have read. 'In fact, a limited young man — but desirous of learning statecraft.' Instead I sent an email. Yet here I am, in the embassy on Jauresgasse in Vienna, being shown around by Lindsay Skoll, also the UK's permanent representative to the UN. I'm doing my best to put my company at ease, as instructed by Thomas Ka, the etiquette expert I had met in Paris. I seem to have succeeded: Skoll is talking for Britain. 'What you want as an ambassador is the ability to convene,' she says, leading me into a grand dining room where she hosts dignitaries. The walls are hung with portraits of her predecessors: solemn, patrician men. I wonder what they'd have made of Skoll — ebullient, humble and a bit of a mischief-maker. 'As fun, you always seat the French ambassador here,' she says, gesturing to a chair opposite a painting of Wellington at Waterloo. 'And you wait until they notice. We always have a laugh.' Talk turns to Vienna's ball season, which peaks in winter and includes a diplomatic ball for waltzing and networking. 'It isn't just some elitist thing,' Skoll says. 'It looks delightfully whimsical and old-school but still holds real currency today.' I ask if I can come. To my surprise she says yes. Before my tour I'd never have dared; aristocratic living breeds dangerous levels of confidence. Now the end has begun. I had arrived from Venice by train the day before. Past Verona, with its church domes and bell towers, the Adige River joined us, a constant companion into the foothills of the Alps. The hills grew steeper, cultivated with vines, their cordons lifted like pleading arms to the sun. Then came Alpine meadows, gossamer waterfalls and the Brenner Pass — once one of the few land routes out of Italy, where porters hauled Grand Tourists in sedan chairs. I took it all in from my first-class cabin. By now I was convinced that rail is the best way to travel through Europe; but the network of railway lines that made my trip possible also doomed the Grand Tour by opening up the Continent. Besieged by the masses, aristocrats retreated into the fortress of the Alps. Their last stand still echoes in the brays of après-skiers. After my ten-hour journey, the first thing I did in Vienna was see a man about a horse. That man, in tweed and a bowler hat, met me outside my hotel: the Sacher, a grande dame as decadent as the sachertorte cake invented by one of the Sacher family. He ushered me into a carriage, or fiaker, with a bottle of grüner veltliner chilling in a bucket on a table (£200 for 40 minutes, for up to four people; We trotted through the city, horns blaring behind us, across the Hofburg imperial gardens, en route to the Golden Hall of the Musikverein — Vienna's most prestigious concert venue — for an evening of Mozart. I disembarked and collected my ticket: a supérieur seat in the front row, so the music would reach me sooner than the masses (from £60pp; 'I'm glad someone else dressed up,' said William Felton, 62 — a dashing Wisconsinite in a tailcoat — nodding at my bow tie as I sat down. But we were both shown up when the orchestra appeared in baroque costume and powdered wigs. After a hush the music began, enriched by the hall's renowned acoustics. I drifted into a state of reflection on my tour. It is one thing to do the original Grand Tour; a modern Grand Tourist, though, explores not just stone relics but the ruins of a mindset. From the 17th century, posh youths ventured overseas, eager to prove their superiority to a Britain that still indulged the idea. Yet even in the Tour's earliest days, a moral revolution was beginning to grip Europe. • Read our full guide to Vienna The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche argued that aristocratic values were quietly recast by the disenfranchised. Nobility became arrogance, pride became vanity, and humility and equality were elevated to virtues. In England Puritans sneered at peacocking Cavaliers; in France revolutionaries gave nobles a free trim. The modern western mindset was gradually born, and it's why the prancing of Grand Tourists strikes us as ridiculous. As the final piece, Eine kleine Nachtmusik, played, my welling eyes were dams about to burst. I was still humming it the following day when I met the dance tutor Aga Bohun for a lesson in the Viennese waltz. Only late Grand Tourists performed the dance, Bohun explained; it didn't enter polite society until the Congress of Vienna in 1814 (from £41pp for a 50‑minute workshop; Its debut caused a minor scandal, and I could see why. Bohun drew my body perilously close and placed my right hand on her waist. Then she eased me into those famous orbital steps, telling me to move with force towards her, which promised a head-on collision until, at the last second, she slipped gracefully away. Then came the handover. 'You lead and I follow,' she said, as we rehearsed in silence ahead of our finale: The Blue Danube, by the Viennese maestro Strauss, at a proper ballroom pace. Gaining in confidence, I managed a few half-turns at speed before swirling into an elegant exit step. 'Well done!' Bohun said afterwards, pressing play on her stereo. As Strauss filled the room, she explained one last tradition. 'At a ball you must ask the lady to dance,' she explained. 'Offer your right hand and then ask, 'Darf ich bitten?' It means, 'May I have this dance?' And then you perform a hand-kiss.' Bohun fell silent, as if to demonstrate the waltz's commanding principle: the man must take control. Suddenly panic gripped me. But there was someone in the room to help: the amused spirit of Thomas Ka. 'You must kiss but not kiss, touch but not touch,' he said, wagging his finger. I took a deep breath. 'Darf ich bitten?' I asked Bohun, extending my arm, finding her hand. I bowed my head. I had been outfenced in Paris, blistered in the Alps, wine-soaked in Rome and bled dry in Venice. But when I rose, here in Vienna, I like to think I rose as something resembling a Ling was a guest of Byway, which has ten nights' B&B from £2,630pp, including rail travel from the UK ( and Hotel Sacher Vienna, which has room-only doubles from £509 ( • Part one: the most unusual way to see Paris• Part two: the off-piste way to see the Alps• Part three: a novel way to see Rome and an eye-opening art class• Part four: the beautiful spot on my Grand Tour that left me speechless

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store