
Most travel content assumes you’re going to a city to do things. To see things. To check things off. But there’s a class of cities — usually small, usually old, usually walkable — that work the other way. You go to them to not do things. To slow down. To watch a square fill and empty across a morning. To read in a different cafe each afternoon. To find out what your brain is actually like when nobody is pinging it.
These are five cities where this works particularly well. They share four properties: the centre is walkable in 20 minutes; the cafe culture has time built into it; the architecture is on a human scale; and there’s just enough to do that you don’t get bored, but not so much that you feel obligated.
Hoi An, Vietnam
Hoi An has been deliberately slow for about 600 years and the only change is the addition of lanterns. The central old town is 12 minutes wide on foot. Cars are largely banned from the historic core. The river slows everyone’s pace by accident. The food is built around long lunches. Five days here resets something.
Read the Hoi An guideOaxaca, Mexico
The Oaxaca highlands sit at 1,500m so the days are gently warm and the evenings cool. The zocalo is the social organ of the city — a single square that fills and empties three times a day. The food culture is built around the long table. There’s no rush, partly because there’s nothing time-sensitive to rush to.
Read the Oaxaca guideKotor, Montenegro
Kotor’s Old Town is a walled rectangle the size of a large park. The Bay of Kotor below is glass-flat almost every morning. The mountain wall behind keeps the wind out. The Venetian alleyways shelter the day’s heat. Outside the cruise-ship hours (basically 10am to 4pm in summer), the city is calmer than most rural villages.
Read the Kotor guideChiang Mai, Thailand
Northern Thailand is structurally calmer than the south. The Lanna culture moves slower than central Thai culture. The Old City is a 1.6km square moat with no traffic light pressure. The cafes do drip coffee for an hour. The yoga and meditation infrastructure is genuine, not curated for visitors. November through February is the sweet spot.
Read the Chiang Mai guideSamarkand, Uzbekistan
Samarkand has been a destination for so long that the city’s rhythm absorbed every traveller’s pace into something steady. The Registan complex doesn’t reward rushing. The Shah-i-Zinda necropolis takes an unhurried two hours. The food culture is built around plov, which by definition takes time. The general absence of mass tourism (still a frontier destination for most Western travellers) keeps the streets calm.
Read the Samarkand guide