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Solo Guide5 min read

Going to Events Alone: Why Solo is Underrated

You want to see that show, check out that festival, or try that new bar. But nobody's free. Here's why going alone might be the best decision you make.

A
Aaron·Eventi Founder, Community Builder
1 February 2026·5 min read

There's a particular kind of FOMO that hits when you want to go to something but can't find anyone to go with. Your friends are busy, your usual crew isn't into it, or you've just moved to a new city and don't have anyone to ask yet.

The default response is to skip it. Wait for the next one. Hope someone's free next time.

But what if going alone is actually the move?

The Case for Going Solo

Let's be honest: coordinating plans with a group is exhausting. Finding a time that works, agreeing on tickets, someone backing out last minute. When you go alone, you skip all of that.

  • →You actually go. Instead of waiting for the stars to align, you just... do it.
  • →You stay present. No checking if your friend is having fun or managing group dynamics.
  • →You're more approachable. People are more likely to talk to someone solo than interrupt a closed group.
  • →You leave when you want. Done? Leave. Vibing? Stay. Your call entirely.

The Awkward Bit (and How to Get Past It)

Yes, there's a moment of awkwardness when you first arrive somewhere alone. It lasts about 30 seconds. Then you realise nobody else cares or even notices.

The mental barrier is almost always bigger than the actual experience. Once you're there, you're just another person enjoying the event. The music is the same. The atmosphere is the same. The only thing that changed is your expectations.

A few things that help:

  • →Arrive with a purpose. Get a drink, find a good spot, check out the venue. Having something to do makes the first few minutes easier.
  • →Pick events with natural flow. Live music, markets, food festivals - things where standing alone is normal.
  • →Know that others are doing this too. Look around. There are more solo people than you think.

Best Events for Going Solo

Some events are naturally better for solo attendance than others. Generally, anything with movement, shared focus, or natural breaks works well:

Live Music & Concerts

Everyone's facing the stage. Nobody notices or cares that you're alone.

Comedy Shows

Dark room, shared laughs, interval drinks. Naturally solo-friendly.

Markets & Food Events

You're meant to wander. Standing alone eating is completely normal.

Sports Events

Tribal energy. Wearing team colours gives you instant common ground.

Art Exhibitions

Quiet contemplation is expected. Solo is almost preferred.

Networking Events

Literally designed for meeting strangers. Everyone's there to connect.

Meeting People When You're Solo

One of the unexpected benefits of going alone is that you're more likely to meet new people. Groups form bubbles. Solo people are open.

The trick is having shared context. You're both at the same event, which means you already have something in common. That's your conversation starter right there.

  • →Comment on what's happening - the music, the venue, the food
  • →Ask a genuine question - "Have you seen them before?"
  • →Position yourself near shared spaces - bar, merch, food stalls

The Eventi Advantage:

See who else is going to an event before you arrive. Join a Room, say hi, and show up already knowing someone.

The Bottom Line

Going to events alone isn't settling for less. It's choosing to actually experience things rather than waiting for the perfect conditions that never come.

The best nights out are rarely the ones that were planned months in advance with ten people. They're the spontaneous ones where you just decided to show up.

Something's happening out there. You should probably go.

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