Before the end of the year is up I plan on going to Europe with my girlfriend for a vacation. Normally this would be a pricey vacation but in this post I’ll detail all the steps I’m taking to cut the majority of the costs. I’m a low income student who loves to travel so hopefully this can inspire others to find ways to travel frugally. In general when traveling the biggest expenses are airfare and accommodations. If you can lower or eliminate these costs than seeing the world can be had for a lot less.
Getting There and Back
A couple months ago I took advantage of the Chase British Airways 100,000 miles deal (which was posted in the post on this blog but is no longer active). On British Airways 100,000 miles is enough to get two roundtrip tickets in economy from my New York City to Europe Zone 1 which includes Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. The best part is British Airways’ online booking system allows for free stopovers as long it’s part of the direct routing. For example if you were going to Paris, France, you’d generally have to connect through London anyway. So the plan is to stopover in London for a couple of days and then visit a another city or vice versa since the stopover can be on your return trip.
What would sweeten this deal is the British Airways card has a benefit where every year you spend $30,000 you’ll get voucher which allows you to take a companion on the same flight in the same class of service when you redeem your BA miles. Spending an additional $30k on the card would net 137,500 miles total which would allow access to Europe Zone 2. I could then redeem the miles for one business class ticket (100k-120k) and use the voucher to bring my girlfriend along. Two business class tickets would be nice but the problem here is getting $30k worth of spending on the card. Chase only gave me a limit of $5k and I would have to find a number of different ways to get put spending on the card without using any money (Coins from the US Mint, funding bank accounts, etc).
Accommodations
I’ve gathered enough points at Starwood Hotels (Sheraton, Westin, W Hotels, etc.) using the American Express Starwood Preferred Guest credit card to get 4-5 free nights at hotels in prime locations (London, Paris, etc.). Hopefully by the time of the trip I’ll have acquired more points through spending and referring friends (You get 5k for referring friends). The card also has a 10,000 point sign up bonus which is enough for a night at a hotel with a prime location. I’ll probably try to get my girlfriend to sign up for the card and that’ll be another free night we don’t have to pay for.
Another big perk is that if I was paying for accommodations I normally wouldn’t stay at nice and expensive Starwood hotels. On average 5 days would cost $1,000! Getting it for free cuts a lot of costs.
I also plan on signing for other credit card bonuses at other hotel chains to bank the points and just in case I need more free nights.
Meals and other misc. travel expenses
This is one area where I won’t find much stuff for free but cost is basically whatever I choose in that I can eat and attend whichever attractions I please. However because I leave I’ll need to do research and find a credit card that doesn’t have foreign transaction fees for purchases and figure out how to change currency at the lowest cost. Discounts to various touristy attractions should also be thoroughly researched.
It looks like you worked out a pretty good deal for your trip to Europe. Congrats!
I had one question since you mentioned using a credit card to fund bank accounts. I know that Bank of America used to let you do that. But I recently found that they said they no longer allow funding a new account with a credit card. So, do you know of any banks that still let you fund an account with a credit card (and without a cash advance fee)?
A lot of banks killed off letting you fund accounts with credit cards since people discovered it was a great way to get points. Citibank use to allow you to fund an unlimited amount through your credit card but that sadly just ended at the beginning of the month (March 1st).
The last bank I just tried was Plains Capital Bank which allowed $5k per account opening. However I recently tried again last week and it seems they’ve lowered this to $1k per new account.