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This Family Of 9 Travels The World On $5,000 A Month

This Family Of 9 Travels The World On $5,000 A Month

For some travelers, saving up for a simple week-long vacation is a challenge. For this family of nine, however, budgeting for travel is a way of life.

Greg and Rachel Denningsold their home in Utah back in 2007. They had four kids at the time and packed them into a car for a road trip to Costa Rica, where they lived for a year.

“We weren’t OK with just a humdrum existence,” Greg told HuffPost. “We got married and were living the script of ‘get a mortgage, get a job, then retire and do cool things.’ Then we thought, ‘There are other ways to experience life, and we can each have our own unique dream.’ We realized we’ve got to live an epic story and try to make a difference in the world.”

Ten years later, Greg and Rachel now have seven kids and have visited 33 countries as a family, living in 13 of them along the way.

The Dennings on their first trip to Costa Rica in 2007
Worldschool Family
The Dennings on their first trip to Costa Rica in 2007
The family in Hungary in 2017
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The family in Hungary in 2017

The Denning kids range in age from 1 to 15. Rachel homeschools them, and Greg works remotely as an entrepreneur, running youth mentorship programs and leading adventure trips.

The family chooses where to live next based on what they “want to experience,” Greg told HuffPost, and they usually rent homes through Airbnb or VRBO. They stay in the same spot anywhere from a few weeks to a few months; so far, they’ve lived like locals everywhere from Italy to India. They’ve visited castles in Austria, explored markets in Marrakech and road tripped from Alaska to Panama. They ask locals what to do for fun, play in parks and take advantage of free kids admission at museums.

“We don’t want to live like tourists because it’s more expensive,” Greg said. “Slow travel is more meaningful. We have family rituals that we do no matter where we are... we talk about key principles, study together and go out and have adventures. We ask locals what we should see and experience.”

The family mostly grocery shops and cooks at home. They occasionally fly but usually buy cars and sell them before they leave a region. All in all, they get by on an estimated $5,000 to $6,000 per month, Greg said.

Dining at home in Artena, Italy
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Dining at home in Artena, Italy
Driving around with friends in Guatemala
Instagram/worldschoolfamily
Driving around with friends in Guatemala

The Dennings have no plans to stop traveling anytime soon: They’re currently taking a few months break back in Utah, where they’re renting a house. Their future itinerary includes backpacking in Iceland and visits to Japan and New Zealand.

So far, one of their favorite spots to travel with kids is Eastern Europe, Greg said, because the cities are “beautiful, safe, clean and cheap,” and the people there were especially welcoming to kids. Poland, Croatia and Slovenia are special low-cost favorites.

Taking a dip in the Adriatic Sea in Pula, Croatia
Instagram/worldschoolfamily
Taking a dip in the Adriatic Sea in Pula, Croatia
Pisa, Italy
Instagram/worldschoolfamily
Pisa, Italy

Denning says any family can live abroad, though budgets will differ depending on how many kids you have and how you prefer to eat and live. For families who are curious but nervous to take the plunge, he recommends starting small.

“I always just tell people to start making little changes to give it a try, even if just for a month,” he said. “You can rent out your house on Airbnb and just try it for a month somewhere easy like Spain or Thailand. Lots of people want to do it, but they throw in the towel. They think like tourist, of paying bills at home and hotel fees. But you can hack the system if you just look at it differently.”

At Nepal’s Monkey Temple
Instagram/worldschoolfamily
At Nepal’s Monkey Temple
In England’s Dartmoor National Park
Instagram/worldschoolfamily
In England’s Dartmoor National Park

Itchy to live abroad? Here are a few excellent places to start.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.