You should just be glad the per diem doesn’t cover hotels too anymore. Lots of times people would try to fit four in a room to take home extra cash. |
If you make so much money, why do you spend hours a day in your car at home. That seems like something you should fix. |
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HHI $300K. I usually aim for $200 per night or less but we don't care about luxury. Hampton Inn, Courtyard, Embassy Suites is fine. Preferred actually so that each of our teens has a bed (one can use the pull out couch). I might go to $250. If it's $300 a night, I'm renting a house/condo.
But we also have parents who have houses at the beach so we are not renting places there in the high season. |
9k per night?!?!? |
Former Fed here, i like a dollar as much as anybody, but can’t IMAGINE EVER doing this. Heck, I even liked my coworkers, but no way. |
There's a running fed joke here. "What's La Quinta in English? Per Diem." I'm a fed who always tried to save money on hotels and food so I could bring home more money. I was a GS-7 (45k), forced to travel for work, and couldn't really afford to board my dog for a week while I was gone otherwise. We do get to keep the extra hotel per diem though. Some agencies don't. |
Yeah, I have to imagine most places don't allow you to keep hotel per diem. Regular per diem absolutely yes and that's why I'd just hit up a local grocery store instead of eating sh*t food in the middle of nowhere. |
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DCUM is, once again, not a representative sample. Hotel revenue management teams are absolutely price things based on supply and demand. There wouldn’t be high prices in hotels if people wouldn’t pay them.
I think people aren’t being accurate on about how much they actually are paying for hotels either. |
We are paying $535/night for the Polynesian at Disney this summer. That is with a 30% discount from Disney for summer dates. (Yes, we’ve been before in the summer.) This is the upper end of what I’ll pay for a hotel but I’ve always thought this hotel had a cool vibe and I like the transportation options. In London last summer I think I ended up spending $600 because I wanted two queen beds which is hard to find. Over spring break we are going to Grand Cayman on points because I could not stomach any of the cash prices. For college visits, softball tournaments, visits to family, we just stay in whatever $150-200 place is close and gets the best reviews. I’m a big believer in trusting reviews over going with a specific brand. This is the honest truth. I’m sure people pay more but I don’t think it’s totally correlated to income. The spender people I know don’t necessarily have a higher income. And DH (law firm partner) has plenty of colleagues with high incomes who are terrible with money and openly complain about never being able to afford retirement. |
Or maybe they prefer to give money to charity or leave big inheritances to their kids. Not everyone gets a lot of pleasure out of luxury hotels. As long as it's a basic Marriott level clean hotel, I'm fine. |
Same! Would NEVER pay more than $400/500 |
| Usually keep things on the cheap side, but we'll splurge when it makes the vacation that much better (especially by saving us time). When the kids were little we stayed at the LegoLand hotel which cost way more than other hotels in the area but was totally worth it as they had a blast. When we visited Chicago we could have gone with a cheap hotel in the suburbs but paid more to stay downtown near everything we wanted to see. |
Do you not go to the beach in summer? Never visit any big cities? I am pretty frugal person but “never” is an extreme word. |
Am in London ATM, paying far less than $400 for a perfectly fine if small room in a pleasant hotel in a pleasant area right off the District Line in zone 1. Have paid 500 night for a house at a beach. But that's a house with several bedrooms. |
Hotels by Central Park are often cheaper than hotels in SoHo or Chelsea or other trendy areas. Yes, you spend a fortune at the Carlyle (it’s NYC…you can find super expensive basically anywhere if you want), but assuming you are fine being two blocks off the park vs right across the street, then there are reasonable options. |