Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How to plan a vacation and remain debt-free

- SEAN PYLES

Whether you’re planning a trip to a country across the globe or packing the car for a weekend road trip, you can have a debt-free vacation with some careful planning.

It’s easy to see how a vacation can blow up even the most carefully planned budget: In NerdWallet’s 2018 Summer Spending Report, parents surveyed by Harris Poll planned to charge an average of $1,019 to credit cards for last summer’s vacations.

To ease the stress of a vacation on your budget, start with a clear idea of your trip’s scope — identifyin­g expenses from the time you leave your home to the moment you return — and create a realistic spending limit. Then get creative to trim costs along the way.

1. SAVE OVER TIME

Play the long game when planning and saving for a vacation. Put a portion of every paycheck aside to build up a reserve of cash for your trip.

Even saving $25 or $50 a month will help make your trip more affordable. Make sure the amount you’re setting aside will provide you with enough vacation cash, too.

Consider opening a separate savings account and automating regular transfers to help you save without thinking about it.

2. MAKE A FRIENDLY BUDGET

Think of your budget as another companion on your trip.

Just as with any travel buddy, make sure you and your budget set good expectatio­ns for each other. Make a spending plan. Account for everything from flights and lodging to entertainm­ent and shopping. Your budget might not take you to every museum or restaurant you want; work to find a compromise that makes both of you happy.

3. MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR CREDIT CARDS

Have a travel credit card or a cash-back card sitting in your wallet? You can take advantage of it before and during your trip. If you don’t have one yet and your trip is six months or more away, consider looking into cards with a sign-up bonus that could cover flights or lodging.

Card in hand, spend smart. Say you have a card that gives you cash back on groceries; determine what you spend on groceries annually and earmark those rewards points for your vacation budget.

The key is having a plan to pay off your charges every month, advises Joe Cheung, a travel hacker and blogger at As the Joe Flies.

4. WATCH HOTELS LIKE A HAWK

Lodging is one of the most costly parts of a vacation. Shop strategica­lly to lower your hotel costs, including monitoring prices and booking rooms during off-peak periods.

Cheung recommends booking your reservatio­n, but waiting to pay. That way you can continue to monitor hotel prices and change your booking accordingl­y.

“Sometimes prices will drop by just $10 or $20, but sometimes it’s pretty drastic,” Cheung says. “I once had a hotel for $250 a night, then it dropped to $160 a night.”

5. USE APPS TO FIND CHEAP FLIGHTS

Price-tracking apps and websites can do the work of price hunting for you.

With the smartphone app Hopper, for example, you can enter the general parameters of your itinerary, and it will track prices over time and alert you when the cheapest flight is available. The more flexible your travel dates, the easier it will be for you to find a low price. Google Flights provides a similar service.

 ?? AP/EDUARDO VERDUGO ?? If you want to climb a temple at the archaeolog­ical site of Coba, in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula or just hike a mountain as part of a staycation in Arkansas, budget planning will help your debt not to climb too.
AP/EDUARDO VERDUGO If you want to climb a temple at the archaeolog­ical site of Coba, in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula or just hike a mountain as part of a staycation in Arkansas, budget planning will help your debt not to climb too.

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