A Couples Therapist's Guide to Planning Family Vacations as a Team

By Anne Decore, lmft

Family vacations are meant to offer connection, adventure, and a break from daily routines. Yet many couples return home feeling more depleted than restored, disconnected instead of bonded.

Often, the breakdown starts before you’ve even left home.

Someone has to research destinations, compare flights, book accommodations, coordinate schedules, pack for children, remember medications, arrange pet care, anticipate weather changes, and think three steps ahead at every turn. This invisible planning work is often referred to as the mental load. And if it’s not explicitly discussed and distributed, it can cause burnout and/or resentment.

There isn't one right approach for couples to manage the mental load.

1. Choose Your Team Structure Intentionally. Some couples function as co-planners. Others naturally settle into a "captain and first mate" arrangement, with one person steering the overall vision while the other provides support, feedback, and practical execution.

No model is inherently better. The key question is: Does our system feel fair, intentional, and appreciated by both of us? Problems tend to arise when roles are assumed rather than discussed, when one partner feels trapped in a role they no longer enjoy, or when contributions become invisible and unacknowledged.

A useful question to start with: "How do we want to divide the work of this trip in a way that plays to our strengths and feels good to both of us?"

2. Recognize Visible and Invisible Contributions. Planning responsibilities extend beyond booking flights and creating itineraries. The partner who researches every restaurant may be carrying significant cognitive labor. But so might the partner who loads the car, entertains children during delays, handles navigation, manages luggage, or remains calm when plans change.

Healthy teamwork requires recognizing that contributions can look very different while still being equally valuable.

3. Revisit the Arrangement Over Time. A system that worked when children were toddlers may not work during adolescence. A partner who once enjoyed organizing every detail may now feel overwhelmed by other life demands.

Rather than assuming your roles are fixed, revisit them periodically. Flexibility is often more important than symmetry. Questions to consider include:

• What parts of travel planning do each of us genuinely enjoy?

• What responsibilities feel draining right now?

• Are there tasks we'd like to trade or share differently this year?

• Do both of us feel seen and appreciated for our contributions?

4. Prioritize Partnership Over Perfection. No amount of planning eliminates every challenge. Flights get delayed, children melt down, and expectations collide with reality. The couples who navigate vacations most successfully are rarely the ones with the perfect itinerary. They're the ones who maintain a sense of partnership when things go wrong.

If you approach your vacation with the conscious goal of protecting your sense of partnership, the entire experience shifts. Whether your planning style is co-planners, specialists, or captain and first mate, the strongest systems are the ones that are intentional, flexible, and grounded in appreciation. Before you crack open the guidebook, spend some time talking about how you want to work as a team. The conversation may do more for your vacation than any itinerary ever could.