| $8-10k |
| Last month, I spent about $3,500 on a week-long trip to Italy for two, including two train trips. I did not use points but found really good hotel and air deals and went in the off season. Breakfast was included at the hotels, lunch was usually takeout from the ubiquitous sandwich and pizza places on the street and regular restaurant dinners. |
great sounding trip. great price. |
Yeah, we've looked at this pretty extensively and if you get a good cash back card, it's way better than getting mileage points. We have 5 in our family and have to travel at peak times (school breaks) so even a "cheap" vacation to stay with family runs about $4K for the week (usually $3k for flights cross country for five, plus car rental, parking at airport, a few outings to museums or whatever, and taking relatives out to dinner a few times during the week as a thank you). Trips where we have to pay for lodging run closer to $10K, because we need a suite or two hotel rooms. I've been trying to talk the family into driving vacations but they all hate driving/riding so that's been an uphill battle. |
I was the first pp who mentioned points. By "points" I meant hotel rewards. DH uses hotels.com exclusively. He travels nonstop and it adds up quick. Every 10 hotel stays we get one free. He also books with another coworker a lot and we get that coworker's points too. And then he's 1k on United so we travel on United frequent flyer miles everywhere. |
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We spend about $1,000 a day on vacation for 2 adults and 2 kids, maybe $1200. But we hardly ever go away for 7 days. Usually keep it to 5.
However we just stayed at the Andaz in Mayakoba and got an incredible rate. Call them for opening specials as they opened in December. The hotel was 50% full and 7 nights was under $4,000! |
No, I've lived for months at a time in various cities overseas: Corfu, a small town outside Paris, a small town outside Dublin, a small town outside Italy, as well as traveled throughout the world. I still think traveling and buying food for every meal, even if you're in America is more expensive than eating at home. If I eat at a café, regardless what I order, I'll spend more than if I made my own coffee and had a yogurt at home. I don't care what street you're traveling on or in what country, that is true anywhere. |
You get to use the points you accumulate flying for work for your own personal travel? That's a nice perk! |
| Uk for 10 days. Flights on points and 2 hotel nights in london on points. Apart from that spend $4000. Family of 4. |
| $4000 includes some shopping and a meal for us and DH parents at a high end restaurant. |
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Family of 4. I think that I can estimate the cost of our last 5 week-long trips:
Ski trip in CO: $8,000 Local-ish camping trip: $1,000 fly-away beach and golf vacation: $6,000 Spring break in Caribbean (stayed with friends, flew on points): $1,000 Disney cruise and Florida: $9,000 So the range is wide and the average is $5,000 |
| Average $2k per personn to cover air, food, hotel, etc. |
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Family of five
Average: 10k including flights Typically at least 8k and sometimes we'll splurge on a bigger trip (15k) - our recent Disney parks/cruise vacation was this much or more, unbelievably |
Disagree. The value I have gotten from applying points to a variety of airlines and hotels FAR outweighs the cash back cards I've seen. I've redeemed mileage points for plane tickets to ASia, Caribbean, West Coast, Florida, as well as hotel nights in Paris, Napa, etc. It must add up to 10k in flights and hotel. |
Wow. Doesn't this make you cringe? |