The best ways to save on travel this fall

For those of you who avoided the sweaty summer hordes in pricey, popular tourist venues from Paris to Yellowstone National Park, say hello to cooler temperatures and sweet savings.

But don’t expect to have the place to yourself. Everyone, it seems, has plans to go somewhere. About 9 in 10 Americans say they have plans to travel this fall and early winter.

Because of “the sustained interest in travel, destinations will likely be more crowded,” Christopher Elliott, a consumer advocate and editor of the travel newsletter Elliott Confidential, told Yahoo Finance.

Demand has ramped up for both domestic and international flights compared to last fall, according to AAA booking data. Cruising, however, takes the prize. Domestic cruise bookings are up 19% over last fall, and international cruise bookings are up 6%.

“Many fall destinations may be more crowded than they have been in previous years, but booking prices and crowds are still lower than during the high season,” Stacey Barber, vice president of AAA Travel, told Yahoo Finance.

Fall road trippers, in particular, are doing a happy dance thanks to cheaper pump prices. Gas prices have been sliding since late July. This week, the average price of a regular gallon of gas in the US was $3.22, down from $3.83 a year ago.

“After ‘revenge travel’ boomed post-pandemic, with airlines hiking fares, we’re seeing some relief this fall,” Kayla Inserra DeLoache, consumer travel trends expert at KAYAK, told Yahoo Finance. Airfares have dropped 26% compared to summer, she said, and 6% year over year.

The folks at travel booking app Hopper agree. “We're seeing huge savings compared to summer,” Hayley Berg, lead economist at Hopper, told Yahoo Finance. “Prices are at about pre-pandemic levels or lower. On average, just by shifting the travel dates, travelers are saving about 30% on fares compared to those same trips during the summer.”

Read more: The best travel credit cards for September 2024

International trips take off

This fall, interest in international trips is outpacing domestic, DeLoache said.

“Travelers are still hungry for those new experiences farther from home.”

And the price is right. International flight prices are down 8% year over year, per KAYAK.

Demand for vacations to Asia, in particular, has surged. In general, airfare to Tokyo is almost $350 less expensive for October than it was for the exact same trip in June, July, or August.

“The price drops are really substantial,” Berg said, “especially to some of those bigger-ticket destinations.”

Shanghai and Osaka are the top two destinations for international travel right now, even with airfares as high as $1,364 per ticket, Berg said. While that does sound like a lofty fare, a roundtrip to Shanghai is $500 less expensive than it was a few months ago, she said. A flight to Bangkok is about $450 cheaper than it was in July.