Small group tours in Mongolia can offer more than a practical way to travel. They can create shared experience, make journeys more accessible, and support a more thoughtful, equitable form of tourism. Here is why small group travel still matters — and why, in Mongolia especially, it can offer something quietly powerful.
There is a moment that often happens early on in one of our small group tours in Mongolia.
It might be on one of the first evenings, when everyone is still feeling their way. Perhaps you are standing outside a ger as the light fades across the steppe. Someone has wandered off with a camera. Someone else is watching horses being brought in. Milk tea is being poured. Dinner is in preparation. The conversation is still tentative, but something has already begun to shift.
A few days earlier, you were strangers.
By the end of the journey, that same small group may have shared long road days, silence, weather changes, roadside stops, practical mishaps, laughter, tiredness and the unfiltered realities of travel in Mongolia. You may have passed around snacks in the vehicle, waited out rain together, shared a room or ger, or sat side by side in complete quiet as the landscape changed outside the window.
This is one of the things we value most about small group travel in Mongolia.
Not because it is always easy, but because it asks something of us. It asks us to share space. To notice other people. To be a little less fixed in our own routines. In a world that increasingly encourages us to personalise everything, small group travel offers something different: the chance to experience a place in the company of others, and to be changed by that in quiet, unexpected ways.
Why choose a small group tour in Mongolia?
Private and tailor-made trips are growing in popularity, but they are not always financially possible. In Mongolia, independent or self-drive travel can also be expensive and logistically demanding. At the other end of the scale, budget options often focus on the highlights and are designed for larger numbers.
A well-designed small group tour offers something different.
Costs are shared, making travel more accessible, but without losing the chance for a thoughtful and immersive experience. For us, small group travel is not a compromise between private travel and mass tourism. It is its own distinct way of experiencing Mongolia.
The value of travelling with people outside your own bubble
One of the often-overlooked benefits of a small group tour is that it brings together people who might otherwise never meet.
Our small group tours in Mongolia attract people of different ages, nationalities and backgrounds. Some arrive solo. Some come with a friend. Some are highly experienced travellers. Others are doing something like this for the first time.
In everyday life, it is easy to remain surrounded by people who think like us, live like us and reflect our own values back to us. Politics, media and algorithms all encourage that narrowing. Travel can interrupt it.
A small group journey does not mean everyone will become close friends overnight. Nor should that be the expectation. But it does mean sharing a vehicle, meals, weather, discomfort, conversations and reactions to the same shifting landscape. It means seeing a place through more than one perspective. It means learning to travel alongside others with patience, humour and generosity.
In divisive times, that matters.
Small group travel will not change the world. But it can widen our view of it. And sometimes that is no small thing.
What makes our small group tours different?
At Eternal Landscapes, our small group tours are capped at six people. We keep them small because Mongolia works better that way. Smaller groups fit more comfortably within family homes and ger stays, place less pressure on hosts and landscapes, and allow the experience to remain more personal and flexibl
We also keep the number of departures limited.
Each journey is designed with care, not simply repeated again and again to maximise bookings. We think about flow, pace, accommodation, driving times and the overall rhythm of the trip. We give our small group tours the same attention that we give our tailor-made journeys.
We have never wanted to create a tourist circuit. Our aim is not simply to move people through a list of must-sees, but to create journeys that feel grounded, personal and alive.
A closer look at Mongolia as it is lived
For us, small group travel in Mongolia is not about packing as much in as possible.
It is about creating the conditions for people to experience Mongolia as it is lived: through its landscapes, its distances, its unpredictability, and the people who live within it.
That may mean spending time with our team as ordinary moments unfold. It may mean staying with families, pausing in small towns, taking the slower road, or allowing a day to shift because weather, energy or local circumstances suggest it should.
We are interested in modern, real Mongolia. Not a polished idea of it. Not a version shaped around performance or fixed expectations. Not the kind of travel where every minute is programmed and every encounter neatly packaged.
Sometimes the most memorable parts of a journey are the least planned. A conversation over dinner. A roadside stop. A shared silence. A delay that opens up something unexpected. A moment that would never appear on a highlights list, but stays with you long after the trip ends.
That is one reason our small group tours are designed with flexibility in mind. Mongolia does not always reward rigidity. Roads change. Weather changes. Plans change. And often that is part of what makes the journey feel real.
Designed around people, not just places
What also makes Eternal Landscapes different is that our journeys are not only shaped by destinations. They are shaped by relationships.
Our small group tours are supported by our own team, including our all-women trip assistants and experienced drivers, whose knowledge, care and calm presence shape the journey as much as the landscape itself. Their role is not to perform or entertain, but to support, bridge, explain, notice and help the trip flow well.We are proud that our team model gives meaningful roles to Mongolian women in a sector where this has not always been the norm.
Beyond that, our journeys are rooted in long-term local partnerships. We work with families, communities and small projects we know personally, and we try to ensure that tourism value is shared more equitably through the people and places involved in each trip.This matters jus as much as the guest experience.
Because for us, tourism should never only work for the traveller. It should also work more fairly for the people making that journey possible.
Honest travel also means honest questions
Of course, small group travel also raises understandable concerns. What if the group dynamics do not work? What if the weather is difficult? What if the vehicle breaks down? What if sharing accommodation feels challenging? What if the trip is not what you expected?
These are real questions, especially in Mongolia, where long drives, changing weather and occasional discomfort are part of the reality.
We do not try to hide that behind glossy language. Instead, we try to be transparent. We publish an annual feedback summary, have dedicated pages for solo and female travellers, and include an is this trip right for you section on every tour page so people can decide whether our travel style and pace are a good fit.
As a small company, we know our way of travelling is not for everyone. And we are comfortable with that.
More than a shared journey
Our small group tours are not simply a way of selling seats on a departure. They are part of a bigger travel philosophy.
They allow us to create journeys that are more accessible than private tailor-made trips, while still keeping the experience thoughtful, flexible and grounded in care. They also allow us to support a more equitable model of tourism in Mongolia — one that values local partnerships, women’s empowerment and long-term relationships over speed and scale.
If you are drawn to Mongolia but do not want a rushed, high-volume tour, our small group journeys offer a different way to travel.
One shaped by small numbers, shared experience, long roads, flexibility and the kinds of encounters that help a place feel more fully understood.
You may arrive not knowing anyone.
But that is often where the story begins.
Jess @ Eternal Landscapes
Frequently Asked Questions
Are small group tours in Mongolia good for solo travellers?
Yes, especially if you want to share costs, travel with a small number of others, and experience Mongolia with local support.
How big are your small group tours?
Our small group tours are capped at six people.
What is the difference between a small group tour and a private trip in Mongolia?
Private trips offer more independence, while small group tours share costs and create a shared travel experience with others.
Why can small group travel be more equitable?
Because it can make travel more accessible to guests while also allowing tourism value to be shared across local teams, drivers, guides, hosts, and community partners.