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The Travels of BBQboy and Spanky

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Why Most Digital Nomads Fail Within Their First Year

Why Most Digital Nomads Fail Within Their First Year

Why Most Digital Nomads Fail Within Their First Year.

Over the last 12 years we’ve seen almost every digital nomad we’ve met fail. Why? The general reasons start with impossible dreams, poor planning, insufficient resources and unmarketable skills. Even doing everything right, there are the mental aspects of being a digital nomad which leads to many quitting. The grass isn’t always greener on the other side, in fact, it usually isn’t.

In this post I’ve cover the reasons why most digital nomads fail within their first year, exemplified by real life examples. And I’ll tell you why some, like us, have survived.

 

The Selling of the “Digital Nomad Dream”

Around 2010, the world still reeling from the Great Depression, books and blogs started promoting the “Digital Nomad dream”. Tim Ferriss wrote a book called the 4 hour Workweek which pushed the concept of leaving corporate America to start your own online business. Travel bloggers such as Nomadic Matt pushed it further, selling a life of travel and adventure where you could essentially earn big bucks writing content on a blog while sipping Piña Coladas by the pool.

When we started travelling full-time in 2014, we met young people who chased the dream. One was an American couple we met in Prague. They had read Nomadic Matt’s book and thought they could achieve his success. They went to all his meetups (drinking parties in European cities) hoping that his magic would rub off on them. The truth was that they barely made enough money to survive, despite working 100-hour weeks on their blog. They told us that they had spent 6 months in Thailand living in a corrugated metal shack.

Less than a year later they had stopped posting on their blog.

95% of these young people ended up quitting their digital nomad dream within a year. The truth is that blogging success is very, very difficult and that you’ll make more money working equivalent hours at McDonalds than you ever will on a blog. Nomadic Matt was successful because he was among the first people to ever have a digital travel blog. It was a novelty…and he capitalized on that.

If you’re pinning all your hopes on nothing more than a dream, chances are that you’ll be giving up on your Digital Nomad aspirations within a year.

 

 

Burnout

People who do make it as digital nomads have busy schedules and often burnout, especially if they are freelance writers or bloggers. If you are either of these, you usually have to travel to have material to write about. A travel blogger, for example, won’t be able to generate content if he/she doesn’t travel. You’re constantly on the move – great at first but it can get old fast for many. Add to that the conferences and events* that nomads usually attend to network and learn new skills. That’s just part of being an independent worker but it can also be mentally and physically draining.

* Logistics are important and time schedules tight, which is why most events arrange transport by charter bus such as BCS Bus Spain. It’s the best and most cost-effective way of getting people places.

We know of several travel bloggers that, in the end, decided to go back home. Working 9-5 was for them easier and more conducive to a healthier lifestyle.

 


 

 

Poor Planning

Poor planning can come in many forms but the one that most comes to mind is the bureaucratic red tape that might pull you back home. Perfect example: A middle-aged American couple that we met in Croatia who had been travelling the world for a year. In their 2nd year, their bank caught wind that they were no longer residents of the US and told them that they could no longer keep them as clients. Their investments were cashed out. The couple had to go back to the US to take care of their banking and eventually decided to abandon their lives as digital nomads.

We’ve met other people who’ve had issues with Capital gains taxes, healthcare and home insurance. These days there are a lot of resources for digital nomads (you can buy a virtual address or get a telephone number from your home country for example). Travelling is easy, it’s the stuff back home that can get you in trouble.

More: 9 pieces of Advice for those thinking of living a Nomadic Lifestyle

 

 

Loneliness and family

It’s very easy to feel loneliness when away from family. The idea of being a digital nomad might sound great, but being alone in a hotel room in a strange city can get to you. You’ll end up thinking of your family and questioning the lifestyle you chose.

Family medical emergencies may also put an end to your digital nomad dreams. We’ve seen it happen a few times where travellers have had to go back home to take care of loved ones.

 


 

 

Making money overseas is hard…even harder than back home

Yes, there are jobs for digital nomads, the most typical being as English teachers, bloggers, and freelancers. But they won’t make you rich. A young person might consider themselves well off if their digital nomad jobs fund their lifestyles. But what about the future? You won’t get a pension from your digital nomad job. Will you make enough to buy a house (which you may want to do at some point) or to fund your retirement? Let’s be honest: digital nomads these days are competing from people from all over the world as well as AI. It’s competitive and if you don’t have specialized skills you won’t put much money aside for the future.

Many digital nomads at some point realize that and go back home to work 9 – 5.

That brings up the ideal scenario: having a good job back home and being able to do that same job remotely. When we started our full-time travels in 2014, Lissette continued working remotely for her Montreal employer. She did that for 5 years. Imagine, you’re making a North American salary and paying expenses in a country where the cost of living might be half of what it is back home. You could be saving a lot of money.

On top of that, professional digital nomads are eligible for digital nomad visas in many places. Countries like Thailand, Portugal, Spain, Croatia and Costa Rica. So you could spend 1 year (minimum, most allow you to renew quite easily) living in a beautiful country and doing your job remotely.

 


 

 

How we’ve survived being digital nomads

It’s been 12 years since we left Canada. Since then we travelled the world and have lived in two countries (Croatia and Spain).

How we’ve survived that long being digital nomads:

  • We made our money before becoming digital nomads. We had to wait until our mid-40’s, but by then we had our nest egg (which we haven’t touched).
  • I touched on it above: Lissette was able to continue her Canadian job for 5 years while we were overseas. That was huge.
  • About 6 years into having this blog, it finally started making money. Not Nomadic Matt-type money, but enough to fund our lifestyle and not have to dip into our investments. I’ll repeat it because some people still think you can become rich having a blog: you most likely won’t. It was always hard and, with AI, blogging has become harder. Another piece of advice: we’ve met people who started a blog just to make money. Their heart wasn’t in it. If you get into blogging it should be a passion, something you enjoy. It’ll make up for all the hard work you put into it.
  • Have a backup. Before we started off in 2014, I did an online TEFL Certificate (Teaching English as a Foreign Language). Just as a backup. I also reached out to a few newspapers and got some freelance writing work, using this blog as my calling card. One thing I’ve learned from successful digital nomads is that all are flexible and adaptable.
  • Slow travel. We saved a ton of money, didn’t burn out from excessive travel, and really got to know the places we were visiting. All about Slow Travel here.

 

This post isn’t meant to discourage you from becoming a digital nomad. It can be done, it just has to be planned consciously and considering all the pitfalls mentioned above. Done right, it is one of the most rewarding ways to live your life.

 

Related: Regrets of living a Nomadic life

 

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Filed Under: Nomadic Life / Full-time Travel

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. RJA

    January 4, 2026 at 7:53 pm

    The best travel blogs are written by people who are independently wealthy, as this means the writer doesn’t depend on earning an income and therefore can write honestly about their experiences without “selling out” (becoming a marketer, lying, posting generic stuff of little value, sucking up to certain people and places, avoiding controversies etc.). You are in a similar position and this is why I find your blog valuable unlike most other travel blogs.

    Reply
    • Frank (bbqboy)

      January 4, 2026 at 8:07 pm

      Thank you very much for the kind words RJA 🙂 What I would tell any blogger is that they have to have a voice. Not a fake voice, but their own style that is honest to them. You won’t appeal to everyone but some people (like you) will appreciate it. Being generic doesn’t help anyone, much less the blogger.

      Reply

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Hi! We are Frank & Lissette from Canada. We sold our home in 2014 and have been travelling the world ever since.

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