People are rich. |
If you know people who buy multiple bottles of fancy wine each week plus whatever fancy beer and booze for their DH AND however much they spend going out Friday and Saturday night, then you realize how much some people blow on drinking. I know this because I have friends and family like this who openly comment on how nice it must be to have money to travel as much as we do, and I’ve helped them run the numbers. In short: it’s an eye opening exercise for many people. Sorry if I hit a nerve, pp. |
Sorry if you don’t want to believe this, but it’s not just Starbucks. It’s Starbucks and going out to brunch once a week and going out to drink on the weekend and buying lunch out every day and having 3 streaming subscriptions and needing to get manicures and buying new clothes all the time. Dh and I both grew up poor and now we are not. We are still not spendthrifts and guess what—it really does add up. |
You did not “hit a nerve.” Of course there are endless ways to blow a fortune—including international travel. But the key is to start with a fortune. |
Yes! Of course there are many ways to waste your money! No one is disputing that! |
I just booked round trip business from the US to New Zealand/Australia and the taxes were $75 per per person per leg, so $300 total. Cash value was ~$6500 a ticket. No one is using CPP on economy tickets. |
+1 it's a spending vs saving mindset. But, it's also about where you put your priorities. For us, it's travel, not things. When we travel overseas, we usually go for like 3 weeks. It costs us anywhere from $10k to $20k depending on where we are going. I'm going to retire next year (when I'm in my mid 50s), and spend a lot of time traveling. |
dp.. I think you are missing the point. You get to the fortune by not spending so much on other things. Many of us don't come from family money. When I started making $200k back in 2000, I still lived somewhat frugally. My mom made a comment about how cheap I am on myself because I didn't buy myself nice things making so much money. My sister made less than me, but herself lots of jewelry and name brand bags. |
Making $200k in 2000 was already affluent. So the answer is: be quite affluent. Yes, also don’t be a complete idiot. But the first step is to be rich. |
In sum… we make a lot of money (but are also frugal in xyz ways that are pretty irrelevant) |
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To save money on our international travel we:
Try to fly at the beginning or end of seasons. Look for airline tickets many months in advance. Try to stay in nice but not expensive accommodations. Even better if they include breakfast Use AirBNBs Don’t use travel agents Do a lot of activities that don’t require additional fees (Outdoors/Hiking) Rarely do tours but will do tour if it makes sense (Vatican). We buy a lot of our own food. We’ll have some dinners out but nothing lavish. We usually don’t eat bid dinners anyway. We have a list of places we want to see and we regularly check prices. If we see a price we like, we pounce. We also compare international tickets with domestic. For example, when we went to Iceland, it was a cheaper ticket than flying to Phoenix for same dates. Same thing happened for Ireland. Those tickets were cheaper than flying to Seattle. Ireland is also relatively inexpensive to visit. Speaking about Iceland, they let you have layovers for several days if you want. We’ll take advantage of that on a future trip. I know this is not International but last year a trip to Puerto Rico was same price as visiting OBX. |
Okay. But the same truth applies to people with less money. And fwiw, our HHI wasn’t always as high as it is now, but we still had disposable income for travel. A big part of it was living within our means and saving. We never were house poor even when we bought our first home when our HHI was closer to $100k. I’m still wearing coats I bought in grad school. I have a handful of outfits I rotate each season and many of the pieces are 5+ years old. I haven’t bought jewelry in 30 years. My DH bought a few nice pieces for me early on and that’s what I wear. I don’t get manicures. I don’t buy tons of costly beauty products. This is sort of how the stereotypical New England affluent lady rolls: less is more. Focus on a few nice things and that’s all you need. |
That's all fine and dandy- we are pretty similar. But let's not kid ourselves- if we were each making $50k/year we wouldn't be traveling much at all. |
And how many points was it? You conveniently left that off. And then compare the points + fees with the cost of an economy ticket, as that is the starting point for most people. I'm glancing at the points calculators, business tickets to Europe typically have tax/fees starting at 500 each way. On top of 150k points. One airline seems to buck the trend and that is United, with much lower fees both economy and business, but much higher points required too. So it's a wash. Because if you're being honest, what you're probably doing is paying the cost of an economy ticket to fly business. You can get better deals if booking much further out, 12 months, instead of six or so, but it does mean significant commitment long in advance. |