Regenerative Tourism Blog

Regenerative tourism: ideas and reflections to transform the way we travel

This space brings together questions, reflections, and challenges that have emerged while exploring what it means to travel regeneratively. Regenerative tourism is neither a trend nor a technique — it’s an invitation to rethink how we move through the world, and how we relate to the territories, people, and ecosystems we encounter along the way. What would tourism look like if it didn’t just minimize harm, but actively created positive impact? What forms of hospitality, economics, storytelling, and cultural stewardship are needed to make regenerative tourism viable, just, and grounded? We aim to gather experiences, learnings, failures, testimonies, and proposals that challenge the logic of conventional tourism.

Tourism ethics: rethinking the “customer first” mindset

Regenerative tourism: does the customer always come first? Rethinking tourism beyond easy consumption: For decades, the tourism industry was built on a powerful and convenient principle: “the customer is always right.” This logic turned travelers into omnipotent consumers, accustomed

Travel as medicine: how regenerative tourism heals you and revitalizes the destination

Travel as medicine: when healing yourself also regenerates the place you visit In recent years, something profound has begun to shift in the way we travel. We are no longer driven only by leisure, escape, or perfect photographs. More

The Paradox of Authenticity in Regenerative Tourism

In 1973, a student stood up in the middle of a class at the University of California and shouted in frustration: “We are all tourists!”

What does it really mean to travel?

From a critical perspective on mainstream tourism, we explore how regenerative tourism can open up new ways of being in the world.

What is regenerative tourism?

Explore its history, key figures, and how it aims to transform the way we travel.

Regenerative Tourism: Rethinking Travel

Travel is not a neutral act. This blog is an invitation to pause, question, and rethink the act of traveling through a regenerative ethic.

A new way of traveling

Rethinking how we travel

is urgent

Millions of travelers seek authentic experiences but end up contributing to the degradation of the places they love.

It’s time to transform tourism from an extractive force into a truly regenerative one.