Anonymous wrote:New poster here. Never heard of one way being cheaper pp. and we’ve been traveling internally each year at least for 20 years. In fact it’s the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing is dropping because demand is still high , only on dcum is there doom and gloom
This. People are not changing their travel plans.
Tourists from countries which have issued a travel warning to the US, including many European countries, are definitely not traveling to the US as much. I heard as much as a 25% drop on inbound flights. But that only impacts your return flight, potentially. If you want to fly to an international tourist destination, that destination is going to be packed, because any recession from the global trade war will probably not have hit by this summer.
Please do not go to Rome during Jubilee year.
What? If they aren't flying in, they're not flying out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing is dropping because demand is still high , only on dcum is there doom and gloom
This. People are not changing their travel plans.
Tourists from countries which have issued a travel warning to the US, including many European countries, are definitely not traveling to the US as much. I heard as much as a 25% drop on inbound flights. But that only impacts your return flight, potentially. If you want to fly to an international tourist destination, that destination is going to be packed, because any recession from the global trade war will probably not have hit by this summer.
Please do not go to Rome during Jubilee year.
Anonymous wrote:This anecdotal and a small sample, but priced a flight to L.A. a couple weeks ago and purchased this morning. In the couple weeks, the flight price dropped a couple hundred. Went from $750 to $500. Also, the flight was purchased a week out from departure, which is usually when airfares are more expensive.