Retired teachers reveal their tips on how to travel Europe for free

Sinead McWalters, 56, a retired teacher, discovered HomeExchange, a house swapping site, in January 2023

Rikki Loftus
Tuesday 09 January 2024 16:26 GMT
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Sinead and Ronan are travelling through Europe (Collect/PA Real Life)
Sinead and Ronan are travelling through Europe (Collect/PA Real Life) (PA )

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A couple in their fifties have traded hotels for holiday house swaps and are making the most of their retirement by swapping with other keen travellers, visiting three countries in 2023 free of charge, with one fellow house swapper even naming their baby after their daughter.

Sinead McWalters, 56, a retired teacher, discovered HomeExchange, a house swapping site, in January 2023 and, after listing her house for just 24 hours, she received her first request.

Since then Sinead has gone to Turin in Italy and travelled across Portugal, and most recently is visiting Spain, staying in homes along the way while offering her own home to holidaymakers.

The mother-of-three says that staying in local homes allows her family to “fully experience” the countries they visit and the community atmosphere on the site gives her “faith in humanity”.

The family have been able to bond with their fellow travellers so much that one couple named their baby after Sinead’s daughter.

Sinead and Ronan particularly bonded with a couple they home swapped with in Turin, Italy (Collect/PA Real Life)
Sinead and Ronan particularly bonded with a couple they home swapped with in Turin, Italy (Collect/PA Real Life) ( )

Sinead, who lives in south-east Ireland with her husband Ronan, 55, also a retired teacher, and has three grown up daughters, told PA Real Life: “The hosts of places we’ve stayed at have been so friendly – they give us restaurant recommendations and one place they even gave us their museum passes and their bikes to use. It’s such a different experience than staying in hotels.

“You’re not in a touristy area so you really get to appreciate the local culture and we get a really deep insight into their way of life.”

It was not until January 2023, when Sinead read a newspaper article, that she discovered the concept of home swapping with other holidaymakers.

Used to camping or staying in hotels, Sinead recalled wanting to give home swapping a try after her husband had recently retired – freeing up their time to see more of the world.

Telling her husband Ronan about the website, they decided to list their house and, within 24 hours, they received their first request.

Surprised by how quickly people had responded to her listing, Sinead and Ronan had their first exchange firmed up by February and began speaking to a couple in Turin, Italy, and chose to do their swap with them in June 2023.

Sinead said: “We’ve always travelled an awful lot but we tend to stay in hotel rooms and missed the comforts of home while we were away.

“Discovering HomeExchange, we knew it was worth exploring and we couldn’t be happier. It’s just a fantastic system and we’ve met some wonderful people.”

Since their first swap the couple have toured Europe, staying in eight different houses around Portugal and most recently exploring Malaga, Spain.

Sinead is currently exploring Malaga, Spain (Collect/PA Real Life)
Sinead is currently exploring Malaga, Spain (Collect/PA Real Life) (Sinead is currently exploring Malaga, Spain (Collect/PA Real Life))

Sinead and Ronan are often abroad but say they are not interested in making money from their home swaps.

Sinead said: “It’s not a financial thing, I don’t like asking people for money because I think it takes the whole feeling out of it and goes against the ethos of it.”

Sometimes the couple stay at home while people visit, calling it a hospitality stay, where they are on hand for tips or help.

Sinead added: “We never rent out our bedroom during home exchanges so we use the spare rooms for guests.

“When we’re also home, we give them their privacy and have a separate sitting room that they can relax in, and they have their own private bathroom.

“Often though, we find that people who come to visit want to talk to us about their plans and share their experiences. They’re always so positive and it’s lovely.

“We’re also on hand if they need a babysitter and they want to go out for a date night, which we’re happy to do.

“We’ve always been massive travellers and I still love camping but it’s a summer activity, and now that we’ve retired we want to be able to go away all year round and we’ve found that home exchanges are far more comfortable than other travel alternatives.

“Our experiences have been lovely through home swapping, it’s so welcoming and caring and just gives you a lot of hope in humanity.”

In fact, Sinead and Ronan bonded so well with another couple that they wanted to name their baby after Sinead.

She said: “They are a couple from Turin and they really wanted to call their baby after me but their friends and family made them realise that it would be unpronounceable in Italian.

“So instead they named their little girl after my daughter Meabh, but are spelling her name the English way – Maeve.”

Now the family are on their latest adventure through the home exchange website, escaping the January blues in favour of Malaga, Spain.

Sinead added: “At a hotel or an Airbnb, you’re usually in the centre, in a really touristy area, but through HomeExchange we’ve been able to stay in local neighbourhoods and it’s given us a deep insight to the local culture and way of life.

“It’s an experience you would just never get otherwise and we love being able to connect with other people.

“HomeExchange has given me so much hope for humanity. The trust, transparency, welcome, generosity is far greater than I would ever have imagined.”

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