Archive for January, 2008

Five strategies for finding cheaper airfares in 2008

This just came in from “Smarter Travel”

There are some new strategies you may want to employ when searching for the cheapest fare this year, and a few old ones that are still relevant. Use this guide to help you find the least expensive prices for airfare this year.

Know where to look

If you’re a devotee of a particular online travel agency, you may be missing out on cheaper fares not available through those types of booking websites. In 2007, new airlines Skybus and Virgin America began flying, and their fares are only available on their own websites. (The exception being Orbitz, which sells Virgin America’s fares.) Skybus’ prices start at $10 each way, and Virgin America offers competitive prices for travel to cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas, New York, and Washington, D.C. Southwest and Allegiant still sell tickets only on their own sites.

Other airlines’ cheapest fares may be available only on their own sites. Spirit, for example, routinely offers fares as low as $0.02, but you won’t find those prices anywhere but its website.

Let low fares come to you

Many websites, including Kayak, Orbitz, and Travelocity, offer fare alert services that make it easy to watch fares on a particular route. Select your departure and destination cities, travel dates, and maximum price for airfare, and the fare-watching service will notify you by email if your route drops below the maximum price.

Expedia and Yahoo! offer slightly different programs. Expedia’s Fare Alert is a downloadable tool (for Windows users only) that notifies you via pop-up message when a fare matching your criteria has been booked by another Expedia user. Also a desktop tool, the Yahoo! FareChase Alerts widget works the same way as Fare Alert, notifying you when fares on your route drop below the maximum you selected.

Though it’s not as customizable as Fare Alert, Southwest’s Ding! program is another downloadable application. Select your preferred departure cities, and Southwest will notify you of special sale fares featuring those cities as often as several times a day.

Whether you prefer emails or desktop notifications, these fare-tracking programs take the hassle out of what can be a time-consuming process.

Try new websites

You’re probably aware of old standbys such as Kayak, BookingBuddy.com, SideStep, Expedia, Orbitz, and Travelocity, but several new fare-comparison websites joined the crowd in 2007. Check them out during your next search, and you might find that one of them works better for your trip or search preferences.

Vayama specializes in international fares, offering a “massive selection” of fares, some of which were not previously available online.

CFares, a membership-only site, also focuses on overseas flights, claiming to find fares from airlines, travel sites, and wholesalers. Gold-level members may use the site for free, but for a $50 yearly fee, Platinum members have access to even lower fares. Of course, there’s no real way to know if the $50 fee is worth the cost before signing up.

In his initial comparisons, columnist Ed Perkins found no discernible difference between fares offered by the two websites.

Book in advance

Year after year, the advice from airfare experts around the Web is always the same: book well in advance for travel during popular periods. Resolve to make 2008 the year you actually heed this wisdom. If you’re planning a summer vacation in Europe, start looking at airfare now. Plan to travel for Thanksgiving or Christmas? Start pricing flights this summer. Even if you don’t normally book so far in advance, it can’t hurt to start looking early, and you might even spot a great deal.

Know when to book

Instead of devoting your weekends to searching for flights, remember that my research indicates the cheapest fares are available on Tuesdays. Airlines tend to release new fare sales early in the week, and last-minute airfares for the upcoming weekends are plentiful on Tuesdays as well. Though it isn’t foolproof, it’s still a good idea to search for fares on Tuesdays.

(Editor’s Note: BookingBuddy.com and SmarterTravel.com are members of the TripAdvisor Media Network, an operating company of Expedia, Inc. Expedia, Inc. also owns Expedia.com.)

Have a great day…Be safe…..Happy Traveling!!!

 

 

That can’t be true, can it? Travel myths and facts

Well with a new year, we start dreaming of new travel destinations and begin making plans to go away to either far or near places that will take us away for a while from our every day life.

I just received this article from MSNBC, that may give us some insides into the travel world out there, and it may also clarify some of our misconceptions.

Are there secret codes that will get you top service on airlines? Is your credit card information encrypted on your hotel key card? And are hotel rooms as filthy as you’ve heard?

And here’s a hint if you’re impatient for the answers: No, no, and yes.

Here are several of the most enduring legends, along with some clear-eyed facts.

The airline secret code
The hardest-to-kill legend is the claim that you’ll receive special treatment from an airline only if you utter the secret code “Rule 240.” Whenever your flight is canceled or seriously delayed, the story goes, simply ask the gate agent to Rule 240 you, and the airline will magically place you, at no additional cost, on the next available flight of any other carrier flying the route.

The problem? There is no Rule 240, at least not anymore. Rule 240 was shorthand for an old Civil Aeronautics Board regulation that required airlines to immediately place you on another flight, regardless of the fare you originally paid or the carrier you originally booked. But the C.A.B. and its rules disappeared after the airlines were deregulated in 1978.Today, carriers set their own rules, and they’re laid out in the “contract of carriage” buried in the fine print on airline Web sites. You agree to the contract when you buy a ticket, and most carriers have terms similar to the jargon imposed by Delta Air Lines. Delta’s contract promises nothing; it even specifically disavows its responsibly to place you on the flight with the date, time, and destination printed on your ticket. As for getting help if your flight is grounded, lots of luck. According to Delta, any assistance is “at our sole discretion.”

Why does the myth of Rule 240 — and the chimera of mandated federal travel assistance — persist? Airline legerdemain. At least three carriers — Delta, United and Northwest — call their proprietary contract terms Rule 240. This must be some sort of inside joke that amuses airline-contract lawyers.

Dress up and get upgraded
Dressing for success, at least for business travelers, is about snaring that elusive upgrade to first or business class. Far too many flyers cling to the belief that airlines give free upgrades to the folks who will look cool in a premium-class seat.

The truth, of course, is altogether different. For starters, airlines don’t give out free upgrades anymore. Thanks to frequent-flyer-program databases, carriers can easily identify their best, most profitable customers, and upgrades are awarded in fairly rigid compliance with the perks promised to that elite group. Plus, airlines have learned that upgrades to remaining premium-class seats can be sold at the gate moments before departure. (Depending on the route, upgrade fees range from $15 to $500 per flight.) So there’s no need for carriers to give seats away to anyone, let alone award them to flossy-looking budget flyers.

That being said, my friend Leonora was bumped up to business class last year because she had the right shoes. Leonora has a bad right hip and needs to fly in a coach seat with an aisle on her right. When she booked a flight to visit family in London, I called a friend at the airline and asked him to flag her request. He did — and also apparently marked her as a V.I.P. When Leonora appeared at the gate, the agent looked at her comfortable shoes and asked, “Do you have a pair of high heels?” Leonora produced a pair from her carry-on, slipped into them, and the gate agent proceeded to put her in the last available seat up front.

The hacked key card
Hotels have switched from traditional metal room keys to computerized plastic key cards, giving rise to a weird urban-travel legend. Paranoid travelers are concerned that hotels encrypt credit-card details on the magnetic stripe of the key cards; then, once a guest checks out and returns the key card to the front desk, unscrupulous hotel clerks hack the credit-card number and go on spending sprees.

Pure fantasy. Although hotels can encrypt your key card with credit-card information, they almost never do. And despite an endless series of “tips” in the last year, I’ve never seen a police report or legal documents that prove a person’s financial details were lifted from a hotel key card.

Not convinced? Then do what I do: Take the key card with you when you leave. No hotel in the world requires you to turn it in when you check out. I’ve never even been asked to do so. If you really want to worry about hotel key cards, consider this: If there’s a power failure, and the hotel doesn’t have back-up power, those electronic locks won’t always work, and you may be locked out of your room for the duration of the blackout. Unlike the key-card scam, this has actually been known to happen over the years.

The despicably dirty hotel
Of course, not every tale is a myth. Sadly, the one that claims hotel maids do terrible things while “cleaning” your room can be all too true. Hygiene standards at hotels are, frankly, in the toilet.

The exact shape of this rumor changes from time to time. One year, horrified guests whisper that maids are using water from the toilet to clean the mugs next to your in-room coffeemaker. Another year, someone will claim that black-light inspections of hotel duvets and bedspreads reveal colonies of germs and parasites. Travelers routinely swap tales of hotels plagued by bedbugs. Eventually some local television station, usually during a ratings period, will send its intrepid “investigative” team to uncover the despicable sanitary conditions at area hotels. (An Atlanta station’s recent exposé of how maids clean glassware is on YouTube.

Hotels in every price range underpay and overwork their housecleaning staff, who then take appalling, unsanitary shortcuts in order to get their work done. And that’s no surprise: Noted lodging consultant Michael Matthews once estimated that the average hotel maid “has just four seconds per square foot to clean a guest room and is paid half a cent per square foot for her labors.”

Makes you long for the days when hotels put cheap, disposable plastic glasses in your room, doesn’t it?

That been said, there will be more travel myths out there, and I will keep you inform of all informations I receive, good, bad or otherwise so it will help you be a well inform traveler, armed with all the tools to make your future travel,  safe, fun and enjoyable.

 

Until next time…Keep safe…Happy Traveling!!!