Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

.



A few years ago, booking a family holiday used to feel pretty straightforward. You’d pick a destination, find flights that didn’t completely destroy your budget, argue about baggage limits, and then spend the week trying to make the most of it. Simple. Expensive, but simple.

Lately though? More and more families I know are quietly ditching the whole flight circus and choosing road trips instead — especially when bikes are involved.

And honestly, I get it.

Flights feel harder than they used to. Airports are stressful. Luggage is a gamble. Kids are restless. Everything costs more than it should. And you haven’t even arrived yet.

Road trips, on the other hand, have a kind of sneaky magic. You control the pace. You stop when you want. You pack what you need. You can bring the gear that makes the holiday fun instead of trying to squeeze your life into a carry-on suitcase.

If you’ve got riders in the family — whether that’s mountain biking, gravel riding, BMX, or just cruising along beach paths — road trips open up a whole category of trips that feel freer, cheaper, and honestly more memorable.

And the funny part? Once families start doing “ride-and-roam” weekends, they don’t really want to go back.

The Holiday Shift Nobody’s Talking About (But Everyone’s Doing)

I’ve noticed this trend all over Australia, from mates in Perth planning long coastal drives, to families in Sydney heading out toward the Blue Mountains, to Brisbane locals sneaking down the coast for a few days with bikes strapped on and snacks stuffed into every cup holder.

It’s not always a huge trip either. Sometimes it’s three nights away. Sometimes it’s a “leave after school Friday, back Sunday arvo” kind of deal.

But the logic is the same:

Road trips feel more doable. Especially when life is busy.

You don’t need to coordinate perfect flight times. You don’t need to stress about airport parking. You don’t need to pray your bike bag doesn’t get destroyed somewhere between check-in and baggage claim.

You just… go.

And once bikes become part of your family life, being able to travel with them easily changes everything.

The Real Reason Families Are Choosing Road Trips: Less Friction

This is the part people don’t always admit, but it’s the truth.

Families aren’t switching to road trips because they suddenly love driving eight hours with kids in the back seat asking, “how long?” every 14 minutes.

They’re switching because road trips reduce friction.

With flying, you’ve got friction baked into the process:

You’re limited by baggage rules. You’re limited by schedules. You’re limited by what you can reasonably carry and still remain a functioning human.

With a road trip, you remove a lot of those constraints. You can bring proper snacks. You can bring a beach tent. You can bring a spare jacket. You can bring the weird toy that keeps the toddler calm. You can bring bikes without turning it into a full equipment logistics project.

Which is why bike-friendly road trips are becoming the new favourite family holiday. You don’t need to plan some perfect, once-a-year mega trip. You can do more small ones throughout the year, and they still feel like a proper break.

Why Bikes Make a Road Trip Feel Like a “Real” Holiday

Here’s the thing about travelling with kids: they don’t care about fancy restaurants and boutique hotels nearly as much as adults do. They care about freedom.

They care about doing stuff.

Bikes give families an instant activity anywhere you go. Even if the weather isn’t perfect. Even if the beach is crowded. Even if everyone’s a little cranky from the drive.

You pull into a new town, and suddenly the bikes turn it into a playground. You’ve got trails to explore, paths to cruise, coffee runs to do, little adventures that don’t cost anything extra.

And if you’re into mountain biking, Australia is basically stacked with options. From trail networks in Victoria to NSW riding hubs, plus all the newer community-built tracks popping up in surprising places, it’s become much easier to build a trip around riding.

If you want a solid resource for finding trails across the country, Trailforks is genuinely useful and widely trusted in the MTB world.

It’s one of those things where you plan the trip around the destination, but the riding becomes the highlight.

The Gear Problem (And Why It Used to Stop People)

Now, I’ll be honest: the biggest reason families didn’t do this sooner wasn’t lack of interest.

It was gear.

More specifically, transporting bikes used to feel like a hassle. And when you’re dealing with family schedules, you don’t have time for hassle.

You’ve probably seen it before — a setup that technically works but takes forever to load. Bikes swinging around. Straps everywhere. Everyone standing in the driveway waiting while one person fiddles with the rack trying to make it “secure enough.”

Not ideal. And it’s usually the exact moment someone says, “You know what… maybe we’ll just skip it.”

That’s why a lot of families have started upgrading their transport setup. Not because they’re gear nerds, but because they want weekends to feel easy.

A simpler transport system takes away the biggest obstacle. Once loading bikes stops being annoying, you go more often. It’s that simple.

For families who need to carry multiple bikes without turning it into chaos, setups like vertical bike racks make the whole process smoother — especially when you’re doing regular road trips and want to load quickly, drive confidently, and get on with the fun part.

And that’s the thing: you don’t need the “best” setup. You need the setup you’ll use without swearing.

Road Trips Feel Cheaper (Even When They’re Not “Cheap”)

Let’s not pretend road trips are free. Fuel adds up. Accommodation adds up. Snacks add up (especially when you keep buying “just one more thing” at a servo).

But compared to flights for a family? Road trips often feel more manageable because you can control the spend.

You can choose cheaper stays. You can pack meals. You can split up stops. You can decide to extend the trip if it’s going well without rebooking flights.

Also, road trips let you do more frequent micro-holidays. A short three-night trip doesn’t require months of planning. It’s not this massive “annual event.” It’s just… a break.

Even Tourism Australia has been highlighting road trips as one of the best ways to explore the country because of the flexibility and range of experiences you can build into one drive.

There’s something empowering about being able to pack up and go, without needing an itinerary that feels like a corporate spreadsheet.

The “In-Between” Places Become the Best Part

This is what surprised me most the first time I did a proper ride-focused road trip.

The destination was great, sure. But the little moments in between ended up being the best memories.

Stopping at a random bakery in a small town. Pulling off at a lookout because someone spotted something cool. Finding a quiet trailhead that wasn’t even on the original plan. Letting the kids ride around the caravan park while you decompress for five minutes.

Flights don’t really give you those moments. Flights are just transportation.

Road trips are part of the story.

And when bikes come along, those “in-between” moments multiply. You’re not just driving to a place. You’re exploring everything around it.

It’s Easier to Travel With “Real” Comfort Items

I don’t mean luxury items. I mean the things that make family travel pleasant.

Road trips let you bring things you’d never bother taking on a flight, like:

  • A proper esky with cold drinks
  • Beach chairs that don’t collapse instantly
  • Extra layers in case the weather turns
  • A pump, spare tube, and tools (without worrying about airline rules)
  • A towel for the “unexpected swim” moment

Okay, that’s one list. I’ll behave.

But you get the point. The gear isn’t about being over-prepared. It’s about avoiding that frustrating feeling of being stuck somewhere without the one thing that would’ve made the day easier.

Bikes Encourage the “Do Something” Part of Holidays

Some holidays are meant for lying by a pool. No shame in that.

But for a lot of families, the best holidays have a rhythm. A bit of movement. A bit of adventure. A bit of “we actually did stuff today.”

Bikes make that easy.

You don’t need a full-day plan. You can do a 45-minute ride in the morning, explore town, grab lunch, then relax in the afternoon without feeling like you wasted the day.

Plus, biking is one of those rare activities that works across ages. Kids can cruise. Teenagers can push harder. Adults can ride at their level. It’s flexible.

And if you’re trying to get your kids off screens for a couple of days? Bikes help with that too, without making it feel like a punishment.

The Australian Government’s health guidance consistently encourages regular physical activity for both kids and adults, and cycling is one of the easiest ways to fold movement into normal life without forcing it.

The “Everyone’s Happy” Factor

This is where road trips beat flights for families, in my opinion.

Flying compresses stress into a short time window. You’ve got tight schedules, crowded spaces, delays, rules, and a general feeling of being trapped in a system you can’t control. Even when it goes smoothly, it’s still mentally taxing.

Road trips spread the stress out in a way that’s easier to handle. You can stop. You can reset. You can change plans.

And if you’ve got bikes with you, you’ve always got something fun to do when you arrive. You can burn off energy, explore, and reset everyone’s mood quickly.

It’s not magic, but it’s close.

What a “Ride Holiday” Looks Like for Real Families

It doesn’t have to be some hardcore mountain bike mission where you wake up at 5am and smash trails all day.

A ride holiday can be:

You drive to a coastal town. The kids ride along the foreshore path. You stop for fish and chips. Someone falls off their bike gently and cries for 30 seconds. Everyone recovers. Then you ride again.

Or you head inland, find a trail network, spend a morning riding, then do a picnic and a playground in the afternoon.

Or you pick a caravan park as the base and explore different spots each day.

It’s relaxed. It’s flexible. It’s a holiday that doesn’t require constant entertainment spending.

And if you’ve got a setup that makes bringing bikes easy, it becomes repeatable. That’s the real advantage: you can do it more than once a year.

A Few Real-World Tips That Make It Smoother

You don’t need a spreadsheet, but a little planning helps. A few things that always make a bike road trip easier:

First, pick a destination that has riding options for everyone. Not every trip has to be technical trails.

Sometimes it’s better to have a mix of paths, parks, and beginner-friendly options.

Second, make your packing predictable. Keep your bike essentials in one bag so you’re not hunting for random gear at the last minute.

Third, make transport simple. If loading bikes feels annoying, it’ll become the thing you dread, and you’ll avoid trips. That’s why it’s worth getting the setup right once, so the rest of your weekends feel easier.

And last, plan for the sun. Australia doesn’t mess around with UV. Hats, sunscreen, water, and shade matter more than people think.

The Best Part: You Don’t Need to “Wait for the Perfect Time”

This is the real reason I love this travel shift.

Families don’t have to wait for school holidays, cheap flights, perfect schedules, or big budgets to take a break.

You can do a small trip. You can do a short trip. You can do a “let’s just go for two nights” trip.

And when you’ve got bikes and a simple way to bring them, the trip doesn’t need to be fancy to feel like a proper holiday.

It just needs to feel free.

Because at the end of the day, the best holidays aren’t the ones you post about. They’re the ones where everyone comes home a little lighter, a little happier, and already talking about when you can do it again.

And that’s exactly what road trips — the ride-friendly kind — tend to deliver.

Business News

How Thorough Component Inspections Protect Your Supply Chain from Costly Failures

In the modern world, where manufacturing has become highly interconnected, the weakest components of the supply chain can only make the chain as strong as it is. One defective component might cause ...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

3PL Logistics in Australia: Strengthening Supply Chains for Growing Businesses

Australia’s vast geography and diverse consumer markets make logistics a critical part of business success. As companies scale and customer expectations rise, many turn to 3pl logistics australia to...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Why Choosing The Right Shopify Web Developer Shapes Long-Term Ecommerce Success

Building a Shopify store that performs reliably over time requires more than surface-level setup. Working with an experienced Shopify web developer ensures that the platform is configured with inten...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Travel

Why More Families Are Choosing Road Trips + Riding Holidays Instead of Flights

A few years ago, booking a family holiday used to feel pretty straightforward. You’d pick a destination, find flights that didn’t completely destroy your budget, argue about baggage limits, and then...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Everything You Need to Know About Choosing the Right Airport Transfer

Airport travel can be exciting, but it often comes with its own set of challenges. From managing luggage to navigating unfamiliar routes and ensuring timely arrivals, transportation to and from the ...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Navigate Australia’s Graduate Visa Pathway with Confidence

Entering Australia after completing your studies is both exciting and overwhelming. Many students seek clear guidance on how to extend their stay, start employment, or plan their next move. The Austra...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Speed Dating For Business