Eight Ways to Stretch Your Vacation Dollar
There are lots of well-known ways to save money on your vacation, such as booking flights and hotels online, cashing in credit card rewards, or eating the free breakfast in your motel. But here are some less-obvious ways to save money on your family vacay that you might not have considered.
Keep track
This is a surprisingly effective way to save money. Keep a notebook and write down how every dollar is spent, immediately after it is spent. This practice does two things. First, it helps you stay on your budget, because you will no longer be estimating how much money is left in your wallet. Second, you will quickly see how much money you’re frittering away on worthless claptrap. These two effects are purely psychological, but you’ll be amazed at how well they work.
Put the kids on a souvenir budget
You probably enjoy indulging your kids when you’re on vacation. But rather than whipping our your wallet every time they whine, give them a daily budget for souvenirs. It will force them to make better choices, and it will limit the nick on your budget. Let them “save up” the budget if they want something big on the last day of your trip, of if they’d rather carry the cash home.
Go for the free souvenirs
Completely eliminate the souvenir budget by collecting the countless free souvenirs you can find on nearly every vacation – restaurant menus, ticket stubs, brochures, hotel room key cards, hotel soap, foreign currency, drink coasters, labels from local foods, receipts, seashells, and other local flora and fauna, etc. These little things will carry much more meaning than that cheapy roadside t-shirt anyway. And imagine how fun it will be to stick these mementos next to your vacation photos in your scrapbook or on your dresser.
Pack a lunch
Yes, when you’re on vacation, you’re going to eat out. But not for every meal! If you pack sandwiches for just one meal a day, you can cut your food budget by a quarter. Even if you’re staying in a hotel room without a refrigerator, pack one daily meal of fruit, granola bars and other non-perishables. You’ll save money, and each restaurant meal will be more special.
Save at the restaurant
Most restaurant meals are big. When you eat a big restaurant meal in your home town, you take the leftovers home in a doggy bag. You can’t always do that on vacation! With that in mind, here are two money-saving restaurant tips. First, consider eating just two meals – a big breakfast and dinner. You’ll be plenty full, and on vacation you’re busy enough that you probably won’t even miss lunch. Second, consider splitting those giant entrees. Growing teens will clean their plates, but most younger kids and adults would be perfectly content with half a meal, especially when they eat the bread and other stuff that precedes the meal.
The best things are free
What do your kids remember most from your last vacation, the $250 visit to the run-down amusement park, or the day you spent on the beach for free? And how many times have you heard about the kid who remembers the hotel pool way more fondly than the endless museum? The bottom line: Sometimes the best things about a vacation cost you nothing. If you’re in a big city, check out free cultural events such as parades, art festivals and concerts in the park. Or just walk through the funky neighborhoods or ethnic areas. If you’re in a resort community, take advantage of public beaches, state park hiking trails and hotel ping-pong tables. You’ll have fun, and your wallet will be fatter on the return trip.
Think minor
Major League baseball games are expensive. Minor league games are not, and they can be loads more fun. Similarly, Broadway shows can break your budget, but storefront theaters produce some of the most fascinating, cutting-edge drama anywhere, for way less money. Wanna hear a concert? Skip the big-name reunion tour at $250 a ticket and hear the best local garage band in an intimate atmosphere for a $10 cover. Unlike the owners of major sports teams and theaters, the owners of minor league sports teams, small theaters, local music venues, and similar cultural institutions know that they need to treat the customers well in order to win their business.
Pay in advance
There’s no better feeling when you’re checking out of the hotel than to hear the clerk say the bill is already covered. And you will almost certainly get a better deal on anything you order if you pay in advance. Best of all, if you pay for your car and hotel room from the comfort of your home six weeks before your trip, you are much less likely to get hit with surprise budget-killing extra fees.
These are just a few ideas to get the conversation started. What’s the best low or no-cost deal you’ve found on a family vacation?
For the money you do spend on vacation, make sure you’re using a great travel rewards card to start earning points for your next holiday:
Disclaimer: Discover is a paid advertiser of this site.
Reasonable efforts are made to maintain accurate information. See the Discover online credit card application for full terms and conditions on offers and rewards.
Modified on March 24th, 2013 - 2 Comments
Filed under: Frugality, Travel
About the author: Ed Avis is a writer and editor in Oak Park, Illinois. He specializes in personal finance, parenting, and small business topics. He is married and has two sons.
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June 2nd, 2011 at 12:08 pm
If you have kids (or even if you don’t, I guess) the “penny smashing” machines that you see at zoos, museums, etc. can be a good option for a cheap (albeit not free) souvenir. They usually cost $0.50 + the penny that you crush, which is way better than hitting the gift shop. As an added bonus, they don’t take up much space.
June 2nd, 2011 at 2:03 pm
We don’t have kids, but our go to vacation is usually camping or backpacking. We camped back country once and had a gorgeous beach all to ourselves for two days for just $5 for the permit and the cost of groceries to pack in.
Growing up my family would rent cabins and my best memories are of splashing around in the lakes and streams near by. So much fun as a kid and pretty cheap too.