I recently heard about Girls Trip co and it seems like a good idea, but the price and length of the trip seem difficult to accommodate. But I want to learn idk how I can if that makes sense or to confirm that even if I can, I shouldn’t ever unless I get a higher income.

    The international trip fees are usually $2500 not including flights, meals, and what you do in spare time. That’s at least 55% of my monthly take-home pay.

    Just wondering if there’s some budgeting involved or if people that go on these trips are just making 100k+ a year. And when you go on these, is it usually once a year? If you’re a remote worker, have you tried going on these without taking days off?

    If you think a different subreddit would better suit this question, please lmk.

    How do I budget for a premium group travel experience?
    byu/RhubarbBusy7122 inpersonalfinance



    Posted by RhubarbBusy7122

    7 Comments

    1. Informal-Freedom2558 on

      If a trip costs over half your monthly take-home, it’s probably not something to rush unless you’re okay cutting back elsewhere. Most people doing those trips either earn more or save up over time (like setting aside a bit each month), and it’s usually a once-a-year or less thing. You could try mapping it out in a simple spreadsheet to see if it’s realistic for you without stretching your budget too much.

    2. You budget for it like anything else. You save X monthly for Y months until you have enough money to go

    3. id guess a lot of people pay with debt; but that doesnt mean you have to.

      if you can save 200/mo for trips; you can take a 2k vacation every year

      many people are afraid to use their PTO; but if you have the time and give proper notice many places will not care if you take a 10 day vacation

      also 2500, not including airfare/food/activities (which are each big costs)………..what are you paing 2500 for? planning/scheduling/lodging?? id bet the total cost ends up being closer to 4k

    4. Its really a question of saving up for it, not sticking it on a credit card or afterpay.

      Thats what generations would do. Save money and spend it on a vacation.

      Now everyone goes to Disney on a credit card or uses that affirm crap and pays double to triple over the payoff, or worse.

    5. Personally, my approach to travel is that the most i should spend on a holiday would at most make me wince at the cost, but I can pay for it at least 5 times over. 

      So my savings will always pay for it, but that doesn’t mean I don’t find it expensive. 

      I’ve only recently started going on trips that cost 1k+ and I technically could have paid for them 5-10x over (my savings have fluctuated). 

      That’s my comfort level. If I have a bit trip coming up, I aggressively budget for it in the months leading to it (and usually end up taking from my savings too). I then use the fact that I was aggressively budgeting as a way to pay back my savings to in the months following the expensive trip because I will miss the money less. 

      But I prefer to do lots of trips multiple times a year and I am happy to be very low budget 

    6. unlovelyladybartleby on

      You budget for things you can actually afford. My travel trajectory went: camping near home, road trip to see friends, disney and pocket sandwiches and a motel 6, shoddy all inclusive in Mexico, nice all inclusive in Mexico, boutique resort in the Caribbean. Over 25 years, my budget increased and so did the level of travel I could afford.

      You’re trying to run before your budget can walk. Save a reasonable amount per month, then book something that costs the right amount (don’t forget travel insurance, tips, tours, souvenirs, and some emergency money).

      Also, no one needs to pay a service to plan a luxury vacation. Buy a package vacation from an airline, go to a normal travel agent, or do it yourself online. If you’re booking for a large group, many airlines and hotels offer discounts. Concierge travel is for people with multiple designer bags and a new car that costs over a hundred grand every few years. It’s not for most of us, and that’s okay.

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