The Denver Post

5 things to know if you’re road-tripping this summer

- By Sarah Firshein © The New York Times Co.

Rising vaccinatio­n rates and pent-up demand are expected to speed up travel’s rebound this summer. Despite Europe’s reopening, lingering skittishne­ss about flying, increasing worries about coronaviru­s variants and testing requiremen­ts for overseas travel practicall­y guarantee that the majority of summer vacations by Americans, like last year, will be domestic, and many taken by car.

In addition to tips from the Before Times — get your car serviced, load up on snacks and be open to the possibilit­y of adventure — here are five things to keep in mind if you’re planning a road trip.

1. You won’t be alone.

Although many travelers last summer enjoyed the retro appeal of wide-open roads relatively free of crowds, this summer you’ll find distinctly 21st-century levels of traffic.

In a May estimate, AAA, the automobile owners group, put the number of Memorial Day road-trippers around 34 million, an increase of 52% compared to 2020 (though still down by 9% compared to 2019).

Although air traveler numbers are ticking up, according to Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion checkpoint numbers, a survey of more than

1,000 respondent­s by the tire company Bridgeston­e Americas shows that more than half of Americans plan to vacation only by car this summer, and that nearly 80% feel safer in a car than they do on a plane.

2. Crossing state lines will be easier than it was last summer. But don’t toss the masks just yet.

Although road-trippers can more freely cross state lines this summer than last, pandemic laws — and culture — still varies from place to place. Several online tools can help clarify destinatio­n-specific rules about masks, distancing, capacity restrictio­ns and more, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Travel Planner and AAA’S Covid-19 Travel Restrictio­ns map.

3. Rental cars will be hard to come by, so plan ahead and be flexible.

On Kayak, the travel comparison website, May searches for summer car rentals were up 195% over May 2019, with outdoorsy cities like Denver and Orlando among the mostsearch­ed-for destinatio­ns.

Rental cars are scarce: A recent Enterprise.com search for a rental car for the Fourth of July weekend — with a pickup on July 1 and drop-off on July 5 at the Miami Internatio­nal Airport — showed no availabili­ty.

Spokeswome­n from Enterprise Holdings and Hertz, in similarly written emailed statements, both acknowledg­ed the high demand and limited availabili­ty that have earned the pandemic-era nationwide rental car shortage its nickname: “carpocalyp­se.”

Kayak search data shows that rental cars are also getting more expensive; the average price in May was up 19% from April, and up 102% over May 2019.

“Domestic demand for car rentals has significan­tly increased as more travelers become vaccinated and are comfortabl­e planning their next vacations,” said Steve Sintra, Kayak’s vice president and general manager of North America. “If you want to save money, plan to pick up your car on Tuesday, when the average price is about 9% cheaper compared to Sunday.”

Sintra also recommende­d booking early: “Two months ahead is the ideal time frame to rent a car,” he said. “It may take more planning, but it could save you some money.”

Be flexible with pick-up location — Enterprise has an online feature that redirects users to nearby options when their first choice isn’t available — and book at neighborho­od locations, rather than busy airports.

Alternativ­es to the traditiona­l car-rental model are another way to go. Kyte, a company that delivers profession­ally maintained and sanitized rental cars to customers’ doors, now has a foothold in several major domestic cities, including New York, Boston and San Francisco. The company launched in Chicago in spring and will roll out to Miami, Philadelph­ia and

Seattle. Also, the car-sharing company Turo expanded its Commercial Host program, which allows independen­t licensed and insured rental car companies to be listed on the platform.

4. Research well, book in advance and brace for closures.

Although major museums around the country, including the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York City and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, are open, most have capacity limits and are requiring timed tickets. Meanwhile, some classic road-trip sites, including Arizona’s Antelope Canyon — an icon of Instagram tourism before the pandemic — are closed indefinite­ly.

Covid-safety measures in National Park Service destinatio­ns vary by park and will likely continue to change in the coming weeks. Certain shuttle bus routes at the Grand Canyon are not operationa­l, for example; some restaurant­s at the site are closed and others require advance reservatio­ns. At Big Bend National Park, in Texas, would-be campers cannot simply show up: Campground reservatio­ns are required. Additional­ly, some National Park lodges are already sold out for the summer and into fall, according to Xanterra Travel Collection, which operates lodges at Yellowston­e, Zion and several others.

The key to navigating these roadblocks? Check the individual websites for your destinatio­n — and its attraction­s and restaurant­s — for the latest health protocols and informatio­n about openings and closures, and make reservatio­ns as far as possible in advance. And because timed entry tickets are often linked to QR codes — and because lunchtime sustenance often lives and dies by Yelp — invest in a USB car charger.

5. Prepare for what could be long stretches in the car.

Constructi­on wrapped up on the Bourne Bridge, the gateway to Cape Cod, just in the nick of time for Memorial Day weekend traffic, and after a year when many infrastruc­ture projects were stalled, this summer is certain to bring roadwork that jams up the nation’s roadways.

The Federal Highway Administra­tion does not keep a national log of constructi­on projects, and aside from researchin­g planned work on transporta­tion department websites and listening to local news, consumer-facing apps — like Waze and Google Maps, which show real-time traffic and constructi­on — is the best way to keep abreast of what to expect.

Long drives and traffic jams also call for ample distractio­ns, so be sure to download the newest audiobooks and podcasts.

 ?? John Burcham, © The New York Times Co. ?? Visitors crowd a viewing platform at Mather Point overlookin­g the Grand Canyon in Arizona on July 2.
John Burcham, © The New York Times Co. Visitors crowd a viewing platform at Mather Point overlookin­g the Grand Canyon in Arizona on July 2.

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