Today show: affordable family travel

By Erik Torkells
October 3, 2012

I'm just back from the Today show, where I was on to discuss affordable family travel--farm stays, state parks, family camps, and off-season deals at ski resorts and hot-weather destinations. The specifics are all here. One behind-the-scenes moment: Afterward, Ann Curry grilled me about other ways to save and explained how her family buys food at the supermarket and gets a fridge brought into their hotel room.

Plan Your Next Getaway
Keep reading
Inspiration

America's Favorite Restaurants

For our anniversary issue, we asked you to tell us about your favorite restaurant. Nearly 400 of you wrote in. Narrowing the list down to 38 was tough, but we put together your suggestions to get America's Favorite Restaurants: Where to eat like a local, from sea to shining sea. We didn’t have the print space to pack in more, but the web is a bit more roomy. So here’s your chance: What local restaurant would you add to the list?

Affordable Europe: Use Ryanair, but watch the fees

Irish budget carrier Ryanair operates over 500 routes, offering a cheap way to hop around Europe. You have to be careful how you book your ticket, though, because this airline is notorious for nickel-and-diming passengers, such as by charging a fee of about $8 for checking in at the airport instead of online. Here are some booking tips, drawn from my experience of buying a one-way flight next month between Rome (Ciampino) (CIA) and Brussels (Charleroi) (CRL). The advertised flight was €50. But, after taxes, fees, and surcharges, I paid €87.84 (or about $137). The final cost could have been even higher, probably €45 more, had I not avoided some pernicious fees. I reviewed the advice in American, Irish, and British publications on how to book tickets on Ryanair. The general consensus is that Americans looking for plane tickets for travel between European cities should begin their hunt on the travel search engine Mobissimo. I used Mobissimo and decided that Ryanair offered the best times, connection, and price for my route. The general consensus of British and Irish media is that you should book your flight directly on Ryanair.com. The temptation here is to instead book the flight through a third-party, such as Opodo or WeGoLo, which may be offering a lower "come-on" price. Too often, after the third-party company lures you into buying, it slaps on surprise fees that exceed Ryanair's own fees (a truly amazing feat). Plus, Ryanair is less likely to provide its best customer service—to the extent that it offers much customer service at all—to passengers who book through third parties. Ultimately, it's a case of the Devil you know is better than the one you don't. Ryanair.com's worst fees are for luggage. Its free weight allowance on checked bags is about 33 pounds collectively. Whether you check one, two, or three bags, if their collective weight exceeds 33 pounds, you'll pay about $10.40 for each pound over the limit!) (about €15 per kilo, or the local currency equivalent; full fees listed here.) And don't try to pool or share luggage within the same traveling party. That's a no-no. But you can try this Budget Travel tip, instead: Stick an empty duffel bag in your suitcase; if Ryanair tries to charge you extra, shift some of the weight to the duffel and use it as your carry-on bag (which Ryanair allows, given that it's a reasonable size carry-on). Ryanair.com is tricky in baggage rules in another way. Oddly, the site asks you to specify in advance how many bags you're planning to take with you. My trip is a month off. I have no idea whether I'll be checking one, two, or three bags. But as I study the fee chart, I see that if I say I'm going to bring at least one bag, it costs only €8,—half the fee I would pay if I instead told the site I'd bring zero bags and then showed up at the airport with one bag. So, when you're not absolutely sure how many bags you plan to bring, it saves the most money to tell Ryanair.com that you plan to bring at least one bag. True, if I do what I say above, and then show up at the airport with more than one bag, I'll have to pay a €20 fee per bag. But this charge is unavoidable, and Ryanair.com charges the same fee whether you tell it in advance that you'll bring 2 to 3 bags or whether you tell a gate agent at the last minute. In short, follow my boldfaced rule above. Another cost-cutting move is to pay by Visa debit card. Ryanair.com charges a €1.20 fee for paying by debit card (online) but more than twice that (4 euro) if you pay with a major credit card. And note, if you get to the airport and are hit with more fees, you'll be hit with a second processing charge as you pay them. So if you have a Visa debit card, bring that with you to the airport, too! The processing charge will only be €1.50 (versus €4 for a credit card at the airport). During booking, Ryanair.com asks: Would you like to be one of the first passengers to board to the aircraft? Say yes. The advice of the folks at Eurocheapo.com, whose staff often flies Ryanair, is that you should say yes and swallow the €5 fee per person—unless you're traveling solo. The Priority Boarding voucher allows you to board the aircraft as part of the first boarding group. Skip the insurance. Irritatingly, Ryanair.com automatically signs up you for travel insurance at €14.50. Simply choose "No Travel Insurance Required" in the drop down menu. Ryanair's insurance offerings don't cover U.S. residents. Ryanair will request an email address from you to send your itinerary. Be sure you provide your primary email address, and one that you will have access to while traveling overseas. Ryanair does nearly all of its contacting of customers by email, not by phone, so if there is a last minute change to your plane schedule, you will only get an email, not a phone call. Ryanair slaps on a €5 airport check-in desk fee if you opt to check-in at the airport. As an American, you must opt for checking in at the airport--even though Ryanair's website doesn't make that clear. No check-in fee is applied to passengers who check-in online, though. But as an American, you have to check in at the airport.You could get a refund on a $7.80 fee for being required to check in at the airport: Details here: UPDATE 11:20 a.m. Hilary at Less Than a Shoestring caught a bit of fine print on Ryanair's website that I had missed! I originally blogged that you might want to consider checking in online to avoid a nearly $8 fee for requesting airport check-in. But Hilary points out that American citizens can't do that, a point she discovered and blogged about last November. However, she and Student Scooge have come up with a way for Americans to apply for a refund of this fee. Details here. Thanks guys! Feel free to share your own tips of booking Ryanair tickets below.

Travel news roundup

Here are some items that caught our eye recently. Find a trip according to your budget. Yahoo has debuted a destination-finder feature that lets you search for vacation ideas with terms such as “adventure” or “romantic,” and then refine your search by your region. For example, when I picked "budget," and "trips within six hours" of New York City, Yahoo suggested I visit several destinations, including Old Orchard Beach, Me. You'll find the feature on Yahoo's Travel page. Look for its new section titled Explore the Travel Guides. American Express has "going once" and fixed-package Web deals for different U.S. destinations, such as Hawaii, New York City, and Lake Tahoe, each day from June 2 through June 12. Five of the packages are under $5,000 (the prices of four of those trips are for two people and the fifth trip is for four people). The "going once" packages include more extras than the fixed price packages. They will drop in price every 20 minutes before selling out at a minimum price. One catch: Any package must be purchased with American Express card. Go to http://goingonce.amexnetwork.com Now here's an unusual art project for you: Artist Erik Nordenankar teamed up with DHL to place a GPS device in a briefcase and mail it worldwide. The GPS data "formed a virtual self-portrait of the artist that spread over 6 continents and 62 countries covering nearly 70,000 miles." You have to see the image on Gizmodo to see what that means. In London, the luxury hotel chain Radisson Edwardian Hotels is guaranteeing the price you'll pay in dollars. For example, the Radisson Edwardian Vanderbilt, which has a 3-out-of-5 stars user rating on TripAdvisor and is within walking distance of the Victoria & Albert Museum in the south Kensington section of the city, has rates starting at $230 a night.