WASHINGTON 鈥 The best time to book holiday travel? Well, it鈥檚 come and gone. But CBS travel editor Peter Greenberg told 草莓传媒 on Monday that 鈥渁ll hope is not lost鈥 and shared some tips on how to make the best deal possible in the time you have left.
While the prime window for low holiday travel fares has closed, Greenberg said, the good news is that airfares overall are down 24 to 33 percent from the same time last year 鈥 so even expensive fares are not as bad as they could be.
With Christmas being on a Tuesday, many people are taking the whole week off, and traveling on the Friday or Saturday before Christmas, Greenberg said, which leaves the Sunday before Christmas as a good bet to get a decent fare. The same principle of dodging the most popular days holds true for your return trip as well 鈥 most people will be coming back on the Sunday after Christmas, so “some back on the following Saturday and you may have a better shot at getting a good fare.”
You may want to skip the Christmas travel and take off for a New Year鈥檚 getaway instead, especially since, Greenberg said, a lot of decent fares are available, especially outside the U.S.
Fewer people are visiting the U.S. from other countries, thanks to 鈥渢he optics involved 鈥 perceiving many of the Trump administration鈥檚 policies as America being closed or unwelcoming or inhospitable,鈥 Greenberg said.
Those flights that foreign visitors would be taking to their home countries translate to empty flights to Europe and other locations, he said: 鈥淚鈥檓 seeing airfares to Paris for $500. You can鈥檛 even do the Washington shuttle sometimes for $500.鈥 Other prime locations for cheap fares include Lisbon, Malta, Dubrovnik and Thailand.
In some of those destinations, the American dollar is remarkably strong, meaning travelers won鈥檛 have to spend a whole lot of money once they arrive. Greenberg cited Buenos Aires, Argentina, as a prime example, saying that the U.S. dollar buys seven times what it would have eight weeks ago.
鈥楶ick up the phone鈥
Greenberg repeated some of his favorite advice for all travel, not just during the holidays: Don鈥檛 rely on online bookings.
鈥淧eople who book online do it because it鈥檚 convenient; it鈥檚 expedient; they can do it at 3 o鈥檆lock in the morning; they don鈥檛 have to talk to anybody, God forbid. And that鈥檚 where they get into trouble.鈥
Only about 52 percent of the available inventory of seats is online, Greenberg said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 only what the travel providers want to display.鈥
Research fares online, Greenberg advised, but then 鈥減ick up the phone and call the airline, or the hotel, or the cruise line, yourself. Because the inventory that they鈥檙e looking at on their screen than the inventory you鈥檙e looking at on your screen.鈥
Greenberg added that traveling on New Year鈥檚 Day or Jan. 2 is generally not a good idea, though he pointed out one bright side: 鈥淭here are a lot of no-shows鈥 on New Year鈥檚 Day, he said 鈥 鈥淚 can鈥檛 [imagine] why.鈥
If you have a ticket for later in the day on New Year鈥檚 and you鈥檙e willing to take a chance on going standby on an earlier flight, he said, 鈥漎ou have a reasonably good chance of owning the plane.鈥
