Travel Tips

Peter Greenberg’s Top 5 Tips for Booking Holiday Travel

Locations in this article:  Dublin, Ireland Los Angeles, CA

The holidays are just around the corner, which means travelers have already missed out on early bird airfare deals. The good news is there are still some tricks to saving money and–more importantly–your sanity during holiday travel. 

Empty Airplane Seats1. Book Now or Stop Complaining

The sweet spot for holiday airfare has already passed. Plan to book now—or at least by the end of October—before prices really skyrocket. According to Kayak, after mid-October, airfares for Thanksgiving increased up to 17 percent, up a whopping 51 percent for Christmas, and up 25 percent for New Year’s Eve. Check out our report on holiday airfare and what you need to know.

Prices fluctuate through the week, and even throughout the day. History tells us that airfare generally drops early in the week. The key is to set a limit, stay vigilant, and if the price drops below that ceiling, jump on it. Here are a couple of helpful tools:

 2. Pick Your Travel Days

The best time to fly is when everyone else…isn’t. While everyone is putting their Thanksgiving turkey in the oven, you head to the airport. Tell your family to hold off present opening for one day since you’ll be flying on Christmas morning.

LAX International Airport Credit Courtney CrockettAccording to Orbitz, the average airfare on Thanksgiving Day is $406 compared to the $499 the day before. The Saturday before Christmas averages at $591, compared to $408 on Christmas Eve. Saturday, December 28 is the most expensive departure date of the holiday week, with an average airfare of $513.

Extend your holiday trip to return on cheaper days. Kayak has a helpful Best Fares calendar that shows the daily average airfare for your route so you can pick the best inbound/outbound dates.

3. Protect Against Delays

Booking a connecting flight? Protect yourself from potential delays and get on the very first flight of the day. Airline delays have a ripple effect that gets more difficult to recover as the day goes on.  If there is a snag in your scheduled flight, you’ll have more options while everyone else is just getting to the airport.

Stay ahead of the game with some helpful apps:

  • NextFlight lists upcoming flights in case of a cancellation
  • Flight Caster predicts flight delays, sometimes even before the airlines figure it out.
  • FlightTrack Pro has a live flight tracker, among other tools, to help manage travels in real time.

When all else fails, check out these time-killing apps for your tablet or smartphone.

4. Don’t Check Your Bags

Worried about losing your bags during holiday travel? You’re not being paranoid. Look at the reports of mishandled (lost, delayed or damaged) luggage over the past year, according to the DOT:

  • December 2012 – 4.15 mishandled bag reports per 1,000 passengers
  • January 2013 – 3.41 mishandled bag reports per 1,000 passengers
  • March 2013 – 3.05 mishandled bag reports per 1,000 passengers
  • May 2013 – 2.96 mishandled bag reports per 1,000 passengers
  • July 2013 – 3.68 mishandled bag reports per 1,000 passengers

Luggage LostTranslation? December is a tricky time for checked luggage. Do yourself a favor ship them via FedEx, UPS, USPS, or any number of luggage delivery services. You pay a little more than the airline, but you also get a door-to-door guarantee…and no schlepping.  How convenient is that?

If you must check your bag, consider using a luggage tracking device to follow its path.

5. Just Go Away!

Remember, other countries don’t celebrate Thanksgiving. So while everyone else is elbowing their way onto domestic flights, savvy travelers can take advantage of low-season deals abroad.

Think Dublin in November, when flights on Aer Lingus are under $600 from JFK.

Don’t forget our friends up north who already celebrated their Thanksgiving. Airfare from Los Angeles to Vancouver over the holiday is just about $300 per person.

Consider a cruise, with late November rates on MSC Cruises starting at just $700 per person to sail through Italy, Greece and Israel.

For more tips and tricks, visit PeterGreenberg.com and tune into The Travel Detective with Peter Greenberg this fall.