The 5 Biggest Pitfalls of Choosing “Local” Experiences That Aren’t Truly Local
The Trash Museum in Moravia, Medellin - a place supporting the homeless recycling waste
Exposing Green-washing and staged culture so your experience supports real communities
In today’s tourism landscape, the word “local” has become a buzzword. Travel platforms and tour providers eagerly promote “authentic local experiences” but all too often, what’s advertised as local is nothing more than a performance, carefully curated to look authentic but ultimately designed to profit rather than empower.
At Soul Dreamers, we’ve seen this happen time and again, and we believe conscious travelers deserve better.
Here are the 5 biggest pitfalls of choosing “local” experiences that aren't truly local — and how to avoid them:
1. The Illusion of Authenticity: Staged vs. Lived Culture
Many “local” experiences are orchestrated for tourist appeal. You’ll find costumed dances, rehearsed conversations, and rigid itineraries that replicate the same show day after day. While they may feel exotic, they rarely reflect the reality, diversity, or nuance of real community life.
Instead: Look for experiences that offer organic interactions like joining a real neighborhood jam session or visiting someone’s home kitchen, where culture is actually lived beyond performances or parades.
2. Greenwashing in Disguise
From Eco-walks through manicured parks to community “impact” tours with no measurable impact, many experiences borrow the language of sustainability without doing the work. They capitalize on your values while offering little to the environment or locals involved.
Instead: Investigate the project’s roots. Does it collaborate with grassroots organizations? Do locals benefit financially and narratively? Real sustainability is systemic, not scenic.
3. Locals as Props, Not Partners
In some cases, locals are only marginally involved serving food, dancing, or guiding, but having no stake in the design, ownership, or profit of the experience. This often reinforces inequality rather than disrupting it.
Instead: Support initiatives co-created or fully led by local communities. Ask who designed the tour, who earns from it, and whether locals are active decision-makers.
4. Supporting Gentrification Instead of Inclusion
Well-meaning travelers sometimes end up contributing to the gentrification of vulnerable neighborhoods. When tours treat communities as “exotic backdrops” without investing in their well-being, they can accelerate displacement and inequality.
Instead: Choose experiences that respect the rhythm of the place, redirect resources into the community, and foster mutual understanding not extraction.
5. Ignoring Invisible Narratives
Mainstream “local” tours often skip over uncomfortable histories — colonialism, racism, or displacement in favor of feel-good stories. Yet true authenticity embraces the full complexity of a place.
Instead: Seek out experiences grounded in social anthropology and community storytelling. Real stories, especially the difficult ones are powerful tools for connection, healing, and giving back.
Eco-leader in Moravia, Medellin
🌿 The Soul Dreamers Alternative
At Soul Dreamers, we we walk with literally hand in hand with culture. Our experiences in Lisbon, Medellín, and beyond are designed in close partnership with marginalized communities, grassroots artists, and cultural leaders. Each step of the journey is infused with empathy, truth, and real connection.
👉 Whether you're sipping tea in a rooftop garden, dancing to Brazilian chorinho in a tucked-away tavern, or walking through the complex beauty of Moravia in Medellín you’re not consuming culture, you’re participating in it.
Let’s travel with heart. Let’s choose real. Let’s immerse in the real stories of transformation.
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