Why Does the Journey Home Always Feel Shorter?
You're on a road trip to somewhere new. The drive there feels endless. But when you head home, somehow the same distance flies by. Hours feel like minutes. You check the map, confused—it's the exact same route.
Van de Ven, Roy, and van Rijswijk (2011) proved this isn't just imagination: participants consistently rated return trips as 22% shorter than outbound trips—even when the actual travel time was identical.
Most surprisingly, the effect persists even when you take a completely different route home. Familiarity isn't the cause.
You're about to take a virtual trip. Watch the car travel, then estimate how long each leg took. The simulation runs for the exact same duration in both directions, but your perception will tell a different story.
The key insight from Van de Ven's research is that the return trip effect isn't caused by familiarity with the route—it persists even when you take a different path home!
We start journeys with overly optimistic expectations. "This won't take long!" But reality disappoints.
The outbound trip feels longer because it exceeds our expectation. "Wow, that took forever!"
Based on the "disappointing" outbound experience, we now expect the return to be just as long.
The return trip beats our pessimistic expectation. "That wasn't so bad!" Same time, different perception.
The return trip effect reveals something profound about how we experience time. Our subjective sense of duration isn't a neutral stopwatch—it's filtered through expectations, emotions, and memory.
"Often we see that people are too optimistic when they start to travel. For the return trip, the expectation is likely to be based on the experience of the (disappointingly long) initial trip."
— Niels van de Ven, 2011
The return trip effect isn't about the road—it's about your mind. The same objective duration can feel wildly different depending on whether it exceeds or beats your expectations.
Next time you're on a journey, remember: the trip home will feel shorter. Not because you're traveling faster, but because you finally expect the worst— and reality pleasantly surprises you.