Recruiting and Hiring

How Millennials Are Budgeting Their Way Into Global Careers

I booked a flight to Japan as a birthday present to myself. But like many millennials, I couldn’t quite defend taking a full-fledged vacation. So I packed my skincare, sneakers, and podcast mic—ready to work from Kyoto cafés by day and wander Tokyo by night.

The flight was surprisingly affordable. I’d scoured fare-tracking sites like Going.com, which surfaces deeply discounted international deals—proof that travel doesn’t have to be reserved for executives or influencers anymore. For a generation balancing ambition with burnout, access matters.

And increasingly, access looks like this: remote work from a tatami-matted guesthouse, emails fired off over midnight ramen, and Slack pings squeezed in between temple visits. What used to be considered a sabbatical or a gap year is now evolving into a strategy—a flexible, intentional way to grow a career without sacrificing a life.


PROMOTED

A New Career Currency: Work-Travel

Millennials, now the largest segment of the workforce, are redefining what success looks like. Deloitte’s Global Gen Z and Millennial Survey reports that nearly 43% of millennials plan to leave their job within two years, citing burnout, limited growth, and the need for flexibility. Instead of waiting for permission to explore new paths, they’re crafting their own.

Enter the intentional work trip. Not quite business travel, more structured than vacation—it’s a self-funded or partly employer-supported blend of productivity, rest, and networking. For many, it’s simply stretching a remote-work policy across an ocean.


Budgeting for Career Expansion

Despite the dreamy Instagram posts, affordability still shapes what’s possible. Platforms like Going.com help bridge that gap by aggregating unadvertised deals and error fares, giving younger professionals a realistic entry point into international travel without accruing debt.


A New Kind of Career Planning

Millennials and Gen Z are reshaping the career landscape. Deloitte’s 2025 survey shows that nearly one-third of Gen Z and 17% of millennials plan to leave their jobs within two years—not out of disloyalty, but out of a desire for stability, flexibility, and meaning. Increasingly, their career goals include global exposure: short-term stints abroad, international conferences, or simply the space to rethink their trajectory from someplace new.

But affordability remains a barrier. Nearly half of millennials feel financially insecure, and over half live paycheck to paycheck.

That’s why budget-friendly travel tools like Going.com are becoming part of a “professional survival kit.”


The Rise of Strategic Work-Travel

These trips aren’t escapist—they’re tactical. Co-working spaces in Tokyo can cost less than $10 a day. Wi-Fi is fast. And the time zone difference lets U.S.-based freelancers work during quiet hours and explore after dark. The work-cation economy isn’t just growing; it’s maturing.

Deloitte found that millennials prioritize financial independence, work-life balance, and stability. Notably, 20% say they value continuous learning—often outside traditional office settings. Travel, especially when self-directed and budget-conscious, checks all those boxes.


Side Hustles and the Search for Meaning

Many millennials also use travel to fuel side projects and entrepreneurial ideas. With about 30% holding a side hustle—and one in four using it to create community impact—a change of scenery can spark creativity or open the door to global collaboration.

But it’s not all productivity. Only 39% of millennials struggling with cost-of-living pressures said they were happy last year, compared to 68% of their financially secure peers. For some, intentional work-travel isn’t indulgence—it’s a much-needed mental reset.


Making It While Making It Make Sense

Millennials aren’t looking to burn out for the sake of a passport stamp. They want careers aligned with their values, ambitions, and budgets. Global mobility is no longer a luxury. It’s a strategy.