How to Eat Alone While Traveling (or in Everyday Single Life) Without Feeling Awkward

I used to think eating alone came with a spotlight.

Like everyone in the room would look up from their plates and silently agree, “Yep. That one’s by themselves.”

Now I realize something much less dramatic is true: most people are focused on their own food, their own conversation, or the fact that they ordered too many fries. And once I stopped treating solo dining like a situation to survive, it started feeling like a small kind of freedom.

If you’ve ever wanted to try that cute cafe, that local brunch spot, or the restaurant you saw on a travel reel but hesitated because you’d be walking in alone, this is for you.

The real reason it feels awkward (and why it doesn’t have to)

The awkwardness usually isn’t the act of eating alone. It’s the story we attach to it.

We assume it “looks” lonely. We assume we need a reason. We assume we should be doing something else while we wait, so we don’t seem like we’re just… sitting.

But sitting is allowed. Eating is allowed. Enjoying yourself without an audience is allowed.

A small mindset shift that helps: you’re not being “placed” at a table alone. You’re choosing a table for one.

Before you go in: a quick confidence reset

Right before I walk into a restaurant solo, I do one of these:

  • Decide what I’m there for. A good meal. A break. People-watching. Trying the local specialty. That’s enough.
  • Give myself a simple line: “Table for one, please.” (No apology. No joke. Just normal.)
  • Remind myself: feeling awkward for 30 seconds is not the same as being in danger. Discomfort is not a stop sign.

Picking the right kind of place (especially while traveling)

Some restaurants just make solo dining easier. If you’re easing into it, try:

  • Bar seating (even if you’re not drinking). It’s quicker, more casual, and you don’t feel like you’re taking up “a whole table.”
  • Counter-service places where you order first, then choose a seat.
  • Breakfast and lunch spots. Solo dining feels especially normal in the morning.
  • Outdoor patios. Something about fresh air makes it feel less intense.

And if a place is packed and loud and you feel overwhelmed, it’s okay to pick somewhere else. That’s not failing. That’s listening to yourself.

What to do with your hands (aka the classic awkward question)

You don’t have to perform “busy” the whole time, but it helps to have a few options:

  • Bring a book or Kindle you actually want to read.
  • Use your phone intentionally: save a few things you can do quickly (reply to messages, pin places on maps, look up the next stop).
  • Keep a notes app list called “Travel Thoughts” or “Things I noticed today.” It turns waiting time into something kind of grounding.
  • If you’re at home in everyday life, bring a small journal and just write what you’re hungry for, literally and figuratively.

Also, you can simply sit there. Head up. Look around. Be a person eating food. That’s the whole activity.

A few practical tips that make solo dining smoother

Ask for what you want without overexplaining

  • “Can I sit at the bar?”
  • “Do you have a smaller table available?”
  • “Is there a quiet corner seat?”

Most servers appreciate clarity.

Go a little earlier

If you don’t love the feeling of being the only solo diner, try going slightly before the rush. You still get the experience, with less chaos.

Make reservations for one if you want

Yes, you can. It’s allowed. You don’t have to “earn” a reservation by bringing more people.

Bring cash sometimes

Especially in small towns or local diners, card systems go down. I learned to keep a little cash on me so I’m not stuck doing that awkward “uhh… do you have an ATM?” moment. (I wrote more about that habit here)

Safety, without fear

If I’m traveling solo, I keep it simple:

  • I share my location with someone I trust.
  • I park in well-lit areas.
  • I stay aware of my surroundings.
  • I don’t announce personal details to strangers.

You can be open and friendly without being overly accessible.

If you want to ease into conversation (only if you actually feel like it)

Sometimes solo dining is quiet and perfect. Sometimes it’s nice to interact a little.

A low-pressure way to do that is talking to the staff:

  • “What’s your favorite thing on the menu?”
  • “If you had one meal here, what would you pick?”

It’s normal, it’s local, and it’s not the same as trying to force small talk with strangers at nearby tables.

And if someone does talk to you and you’d rather keep it to yourself, it’s okay to be polite and short. You don’t owe anyone your attention because you’re alone.

A travel-friendly option when you don’t want to do the whole restaurant thing

If you want good food without the sit-down vibe, I love mixing in:

  • Food halls
  • Markets
  • Grab-and-go picnics at a park or scenic overlook

Also, if you’re in a city where it’s available, Too Good To Go can be a fun way to grab a surprise bag from a local spot and make your own little solo “tasting night” wherever you’re staying: here’s my link if you want to try it out 🙂

The part nobody says out loud: solo dining can actually feel really good

There’s something steady about taking yourself out.

Not as a statement. Not as a “look at me being brave” moment. Just as a normal choice that says: I’m allowed to enjoy my life today, even if nobody’s sitting across from me.

And honestly, travel teaches that quickly. If you wait for the perfect companion every time you want to try something, you miss a lot of meals. And a lot of moments.

I talked about this mindset in a different way in my post “Life Is the Vacation” if you want a little encouragement to stop waiting for the “right” circumstances to start living: Life Is the Adventure: Why I Don’t Chase the Destination and Life Is the Vacation: Why I Don’t “Take Trips” ~ I Live Adventures

One more thought, if you’ve ever felt weird about doing things alone

If you can learn to eat alone comfortably, you can learn to do a lot of things comfortably.

That’s part of why I love solo travel, even in small doses. It builds quiet confidence. And for some people, that confidence eventually turns into bigger questions like, “Could I build a lifestyle that includes more of this?” That’s one reason travel agent and travel marketing rep paths appeal to some folks. Not because everyone wants a travel business, but because travel starts feeling like something you want more room for. If you’d like to learn more, I’d love to chat!

Your turn

What part feels awkward for you?
Walking in? Sitting down? The waiting? Being seen?

And if you’ve done it before, where’s the best place you’ve ever eaten alone, either at home or on the road?

If this kind of travel and everyday confidence is something you want more of, stick around and subscribe so you don’t miss the next post. And wherever you’re headed next, I hope you take yourself somewhere you’ll actually enjoy.

Until next time, wander with me.

2 responses to “How to Eat Alone While Traveling (or in Everyday Single Life) Without Feeling Awkward”

  1. This is interesting. I wasn’t aware that eating alone brought with it a stigma, but social media has shown me that many seem completely unable to bring themselves to do it!

    Maybe I’m just out of touch, but I’ve never felt that way, and appreciated you saying that maybe it’s just the story a person attaches to it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I appreciate you saying that, Scott. I don’t think you’re out of touch at all, I think it highlights how differently people experience the same situation. For some it’s second nature, for others it’s layered with expectations and assumptions. That contrast was really what made me want to write about it. Thanks for reading 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

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