Four experts on cheap travel share their best tips for maximising value while vacationing

Kate Silver

THE WASHINGTON POST – Scott Keyes hadn’t given much thought to visiting Taiwan or Milan. But when he found bargain basement deals to each – USD130 to Milan and USD169 to Taiwan, round trip from the United States – Keyes, who is founder and CEO of the travel deal site Scott’s Cheap Flights, couldn’t resist booking them.

To his surprise, the savings made the trips that much sweeter.

“I felt completely light and airy, like I was playing with house money,” he said. “I ended up having more fun, because I didn’t have all this pressure hanging over my head. I was able to loosen up a little bit, because I knew I’d saved USD600, USD700, USD800 off what the flight would normally be, so what’s another plate of truffle linguine or something?”

For Keyes and many others, when it comes to travel, the search for savings isn’t just about money. To some, budget travel can present a challenge or a game; it can be a framework to help with planning, a gateway to meeting like-minded adventurers or an adrenaline rush from the pursuit of the deal.

As a freelance photographer and writer specialising in travel, Anna Mazurek spends most of the year on the road, living for weeks or months at a time in different cities and countries. When we talk via Skype, her home base is a USD300-a-month studio apartment in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

“I’m in Asia, so I don’t like to spend more than USD15 a night,” said Mazurek, who wrote the book Good with Money: A Guide to Prioritizing Spending, Maximizing Savings and Traveling More.

Staying in an apartment in a neighborhood comes with benefits beyond the budget: She’s able to live more like a local, which allows for a deeper appreciation and understanding of the area than she’d get if she were in a luxury hotel in a tourist zone.

Travel writer and photographer Anna Mazurek in Puerto Escondido, Mexico. PHOTOS: THE WASHINGTON POST
Beth Whitman is founder of the Wanderlust and Lipstick website and the travel company WanderTours
ABOVE & BELOW: Scott Keyes, founder and CEO of Scott’s Cheap Flights and Matt Kepnes, founder of the website Nomadic Matt

“It’s an added bonus, because it’s more authentic in a lot of ways. You take public transit, you’re having street food, you’re having conversations with people, you’re seeing how people really live,” she said. “I like being in a place for longer, whether it be a week or a couple of months.”

Matt Kepnes, a travel writer who founded the website Nomadic Matt and wrote the book How to Travel the World on USD50 a Day, said that when he travels, he walks around different neighbourhoods and takes public transportation, just like he does when he’s at home in New York. That gives him a feel for the rhythm of the area he’s visiting. “People around the world live the day-to-day life you do,” he said.

Kepnes makes it a habit to cook his own food or picnic rather than dining out all the time. That comes with a bonus: Grocery stores offer a fascinating glimpse into a new place, whether it’s discovering hagelslag (sprinkles often eaten on buttered bread) in the Netherlands or losing yourself in any country’s potato chip aisle (so many unfamiliar flavours). In Sweden, he remembers coming upon a popular fish spread in a metal tube, called Kalles Kaviar. He said the flavour and texture reminded him of Cheez Whiz mixed with caviar.

“It’s actually quite tasty,” he said.

It’s a given that staying in a hostel can save money. But Mazurek said there’s also a sense of community that comes with the territory. She’s made friends and had many impromptu adventures as a hostel guest. “I’ve had some of the best experiences with the people I’ve met,” she said. It’s quite a difference from hotel stays. “I wasn’t really making friends at the elevator in the Hilton,” she said. Fellow travellers and staff can also be great resources on where to go and what to do in the city at hand, or in surrounding ones.

Beth Whitman, founder of the travel site Wanderlust and Lipstick and author of the book Wanderlust and Lipstick: The Essential Guide for Women Traveling Solo, also finds that connecting with other people is the most fulfilling aspect of travel.

In part, that’s why she started her own company, WanderTours, which leads small, adventurous guided tours to places like Papua New Guinea, Morocco, India and Bhutan. While her tour company isn’t budget, many of the travel lessons Whitman has learned come from her earlier spendthrift travels.

On a trip to Vietnam, she realised the profound impression volunteering can make when she helped build a playground for an orphanage outside of Hanoi.

There, she was able to meet children and locals and learn about their struggles as well as the joys in their lives.

“I know sometimes people don’t travel to budget destinations because they don’t want to look at the poverty, but there’s also great beauty in that, too, and part of that beauty is people are really quite happy around the world,” she said.

Through her globe-trotting, Whitman has also learned the art of haggling, and said she’s become a “master bargainer” at markets in India and Southeast Asia – as well as at the garage sale down the block from her home in Seattle. While some travelers are intimidated by the process, she relishes the back-and-forth when purchasing a rug or other items. “If you don’t get upset about it, it can be a really fun game to have this cultural exchange,” she said.

Early on in his travels, Keyes discovered that budget travel can also be a means to more adventures, and a map to exciting locations. Say someone sets a flight budget for USD1,000 a year. They can spend that USD1,000 on one flight to Europe. Or they can be flexible, search for great deals and, said Keyes, easily find three flights overseas for that amount, often to places that are a little more off the beaten path.

“When you know you’re taking three trips a year, you can be a little riskier,” said Keyes. “You can choose places that might be a little bit more interesting. If you’re taking one trip a year, the stakes are pretty high and you kind of have to go to the tourist favorites.”

While many people will first choose their destination and then make plans accordingly, Keyes said he’s learned to flip the formula, making price the priority and then putting the rest into place.

“I try not to set my heart on somewhere and then hope a cheap flight will pop up. It’s more a matter of when they do pop up, that’s when I’ll end up going,” he said.

While cutting costs can be gratifying, Mazurek points out there is one area where she never cuts corners: when it comes to her security. “I will not be cheap when it comes to safety,” she said. “If spending more money means I’m being more safe or gets me out of a situation where I think I wouldn’t be safe, I would spend the money any time.”

That’s because budget travel doesn’t have to mean making sacrifices.

In speaking with all the travel pros for this article, that theme came up time and again.

Cheap flights can be direct and convenient. Inexpensive street food can be delicious. Less familiar cities can be great adventures. Safety is important at any cost.