Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
You're proving my point, the mindset that you have to spend X amount of dollars to have a good time. I've never eaten baguettes or had to stay in a youth hostel and I have traveled on budget airlines.
What is the "mindset" that you seem to think is so important? I've traveled and lived abroad plenty. Now, I'm in a different position, where I need to take cheaper, more child-friendly trips, and also usually try to visit family during the trips.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
Or you could hike in the Alps.
This proves OPs point that it’s about mindset.
ok ... I'm fairly sure that hiking in the Rockies is less expensive than a TRIP TO SWITZERLAND. Also, what's morally superior about Switzerland v Colorado? Colorodo is a much shorter flight, too.
It's good to have an international perspectives, but nobody is morally better because they travel abroad; and vacationing is not going to somehow change the world anyway.
Morally better? No. Enlightened? Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
Okay, and you realize that the vast majority of people don’t live anywhere near airports like IAD with the cheap flights, right? Again, you are being sheltered and looking only from your DC-centric lens. You are unable to realize that people have different circumstances. The stat is about AMERICANS.
Example: I grew up in the UP of Michigan. O’Hare, the airport you can get cheap international flights from, was about 7 hours away (as were Detroit and Minneapolis). That requires adding another travel day, maybe a hotel stay, lots of gas money. The Green Bay airport was about 3 hours away, but that airport obviously doesn’t fly anywhere international and you need to connect in Chicago or Detroit. Adds about $400 per ticket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
You're proving my point, the mindset that you have to spend X amount of dollars to have a good time. I've never eaten baguettes or had to stay in a youth hostel and I have traveled on budget airlines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
Or you could hike in the Alps.
This proves OPs point that it’s about mindset.
ok ... I'm fairly sure that hiking in the Rockies is less expensive than a TRIP TO SWITZERLAND. Also, what's morally superior about Switzerland v Colorado? Colorodo is a much shorter flight, too.
It's good to have an international perspectives, but nobody is morally better because they travel abroad; and vacationing is not going to somehow change the world anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
Or you could hike in the Alps.
This proves OPs point that it’s about mindset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound terribly sheltered, OP. Grow up.
And entitled. Even relatively recently, people I grew up around, middle-class/UMC, some wealthy, vacationed nearby. I grew up in the Boston area in the 1970s/80s, and everyone went to the Cape or Maine for a week to a month. The Vineyard for the summer if they were wealthier. That was 85%+. We traveled internationally because my parents' came from another country, and we visited grandparents every other summer. We were the exception.
+1 I grew up in an affluent LA suburb and it was very unusual for a classmate to take a vacation outside the US. My parents never took us outside the US, my first trip abroad was study abroad in college.
fyi, about 40% of American adults have a passport and only about a quarter have traveled outside the US in the past 3 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
Since this is a site for moms and dads, I'm going to guess that most of us have kids and can't go during the offseason, which is the school on-season,
DH and I always go off season because it's easier to get overnight sitters or grandparents to watch our kids while they're in school all day.
Anonymous wrote:I’m also surprised by the emotion this thread has elicited. Lots of strong feelings on both sides. At the end of the day, travel is not all about money. It takes a lot of knowledge, planning, and skill to travel smartly. But international travel is not as expensive as many on here seem to think, especially relative to other purchases in their life I’m sure, although at the same time there’s no question it’s a luxury item. But it’s the best investment you can make in yourself or your children, and that’s more true today than ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
Or you could hike in the Alps.
This proves OPs point that it’s about mindset.
Anonymous wrote:It’s leas than $100 and good for 10 years. Why don’t people just get them? Gives you so many more travel options
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
A base fare from DC to Paris (off peak season) on WOW Air is about $380. It would be a little over $400 when you include a bag or a carryon. The problem I see, and I see it from my friends, they pay $1600 for a big airline like United or Air France, they stay at a hotel chain like the Sheraton or Hilton and then eat at the most expensive restaurants. Of course that trip will be expensive.
I don't really want to fly on a super budget airline and stay in a a Paris youth hostel and eat baguettes for dinner in the park with my 6 year old ... For that same amount of money I can fly to say Denver and hike in the Rockies, no passport required.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a significant chunk of Americans who will never leave the state, let alone the country.
As others have pointed out, affordability is another reason but international travel has gotten a lot cheaper, you can find airfares to Paris on WOW Airlines for example for probably $300 roundtrip when you include a bag. There's Airbnb so you don't have to pay $700 for a hotel. There's tour groups that build your itinerary for you and have payment plans. IDK...I get it, but some are making it out to seem like a Europe team will cost you 10K.
I don't think I've see roundtrip to Europe for $300 in nearly 20 years. Please show me where and when that is happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m also surprised by the emotion this thread has elicited. Lots of strong feelings on both sides. At the end of the day, travel is not all about money. It takes a lot of knowledge, planning, and skill to travel smartly. But international travel is not as expensive as many on here seem to think, especially relative to other purchases in their life I’m sure, although at the same time there’s no question it’s a luxury item. But it’s the best investment you can make in yourself or your children, and that’s more true today than ever.
Hmmm. I think my children would rather have full bellies. To each his own though!