cheap flights

How to Plan a Trip Abroad

Planning a trip out of the country can be overwhelming at first, so let’s break it down into a step-by-step process. My brain is very systems and type-A, so this is full of nitty-gritty details. Even if you don’t replicate this exact process, steal some nuggets to make your next trip overseas a breeze.

How to plan a trip abroad:

1) Book your flight first

I almost exclusively plan trips around flight deals. I keep a running list of places I want to visit and when I see a deal pop up for one of the spots I book it! If I know there is a particular time I want to be traveling (i.e. late May over Memorial Day) I set up flight alerts and/or have a weekly remind to check flight prices. Read more of my cheap flight tips below.

2) Figure out your priorities

What do you want to see and do? What are your “musts” for each area? What are your “would be nice, if there is time/logistically it makes sense” items for each area? I create a spreadsheet with columns for each location and make a list of all of the things I find that I want to do and then prioritize them.

For example, if I am visiting Argentina and Brazil my spreadsheet has one sheet for Argentina and one sheet for Brazil. On the Argentina tab I have 3 columns for each destination within Argentina—beers, eats, activities. So the first column might say Buenos Aires beers, second column Buenos Aires eats, third column Buenos Aires activities. Then I will skip a column to leave some white space before starting with Patagonia beers, Patagonia eats, and so on.

Within those individual columns I will make notations as I am researching—if a restaurant is a “must”, for example, I will italicize it. If it is a “maybe” I will add a question mark after the name. This continues for all three categories of beer, eats, and activities. If you have different interests your columns might look a little different—maybe you are a big museum person and you want to dedicate more time to those so you create a column specifically for museums instead of adding them to your activities column.

3) Make your itinerary

Now that you know what you want to do, plan out what makes the most sense to do when. You can make your itinerary as detailed or as loose as your style is—for me I like to plan out almost every detail, but leave some flexibility in case something else pops up that I hadn’t originally planned to do or I stumble across a delicious restaurant, for example. This ensures I actually enjoy my trip instead of spending my time researching what I want to do next or where to spend my time. There is nothing worse than being on a trip and spending your time on your phone or computer looking things up instead of soaking it all in.

I create a new google sheet that has each day at the top of the sheet and outline the day underneath. One example column would read from top to bottom: Monday—January 1st—Buenos Aires—Breakfast/Coffee ideas—Morning activity—Lunch ideas—Afternoon activity—Dinner ideas—Beer spots—Lodging. I include any travel in there as well (i.e. 2 hour drive from x to y or flight at x time). Then repeat this for each day of the trip.

Within your itinerary be sure to plan out the logistics as well—Do you need a rental car? Are there any ferry tickets, train tickets or in-country smaller flights to book? Do you need tickets or reservations for any activities or trails? Are there any restaurants you want to make reservations for?

I would recommend marking all of your itinerary items on Google or Apple Maps as you go so that you can then see what is close to each other and it’s easier to navigate once you land. I use different symbols for different types of activities—my method is: trailheads are the green flag in Google Maps, breweries that I must visit are hearts, breweries that are on my “if there is time or it is convenient” are starred, restaurants are the blue suitcase, activities are the teal icon for lists. This makes it easy for me to zoom out of an area and see what order it makes sense to do things in versus crisscrossing across town multiple times.

4) Book your lodging

Now that you know where you’ll be spending your time, it’s time to book where you’ll stay. Compare prices and neighborhoods for hotels and Airbnbs. If you marked things on Google Maps it’s easy to see how far away things are from your potential lodging spots. Make note of check-in and check-out times on your itinerary and if you will have a car what the parking situation is.

5) My Pre-Trip Checklist:

It’s almost time to go on your adventure! Here are the things I think through before leaving:

  1. Schedule a mail hold (for longer trips)

  2. Do you need a visa? Is your passport expiration date far enough out?

  3. Double check flight seats are ideal

  4. Confirm meal requests on flight (when needed)

  5. Charge everything—phone, Airpods, Kindle, portable charger

  6. Confirm phone plan details—what’s included, any potential extra costs

  7. Download offline maps for each area

  8. Download Kindle books, Netflix shows, podcasts

  9. Confirm travel alerts on credit cards, get any needed foreign currency

  10. Set your out of office—my favorite part :)

  11. Hiking? Clean your boots and any gear to prevent spreading any pests/seeds

  12. Bump up the air conditioning temperature or bump down the heat on your thermostat, season dependent.

  13. Unplug most electronics around the house to save energy

  14. Water your plants

  15. Clean out your fridge

  16. Take out the trash/recycling

  17. Pack! I love packing cubes to stay organized. Don’t forget a plug converter when needed, plane snacks, and old-school wired headphones for long flights to watch movies.

Happy Adventuring! Let me know if anything else would be helpful! Cheers —Alexis

My Experience Flying with Allegiant Air

Allegiant Air gets a bad rap because they sell cheap base tickets and “get you” with all of the add-ons such as choosing a seat and carry-on bag fees. Personally, I actually found Allegiant to be a great option and would definitely fly them again.

Pros of flying Allegiant:

  • The price! Allegiant tickets are quite cheap. When going from Charlotte to Tampa this spring my ticket on Allegiant was just over $100 roundtrip nonstop while other airlines were charging $450+ because it was spring break season.

  • The smaller airports that most Allegiant flights fly in/out of are much easier to navigate. Parking tends to be more convenient and cheaper, lines are shorter, and there are less humans in general. At the Concord airport I parked ~25 feet from the main entrance of the airport, waited 15 minutes to check my bag, and got through security in 30 seconds.

  • In my experience I arrived early on both legs of my trip—departing Concord we left 10 minutes before scheduled and landed 30 minutes early, then arriving back to Concord we were 15 minutes early. Can’t beat that!

  • I found the seats to have a good amount of leg room. I am 5’10” so some planes have my knees basically in my tray table, but Allegiant had more space than your average seat.

  • Cheap a la carte drink and snack options! They have high quality drinks and snacks at great prices. Why do I need a free water and peanuts when I can spend $5 and get something I actually want? The key for me was the La Colombe Draft Latte—so much better than a coffee on a plane (gross) and so much cheaper than a coffee in an airport.

  • If you’re going to fly it a lot they have a credit card with some cool perks.

Cons of flying Allegiant:

  • No inflight entertainment

  • No plugs to charge your devices

  • Thin seats

  • Smaller airports have less amenities. If you arrive at the airport in need of coffee or food your options can be quite slim, BUT as I said above the planes have great food and drink options at low prices.

  • You pay to check your bag whether it is a carry on or a checked bag. A lot of airlines have moved to this practice, so personally this was not a barrier for me.

  • Limited routes. Allegiant is still a small airline so they don’t fly to very many cities. Most of their routes involve Florida and the Southeast.

The Bottom Line:

Would I fly Allegiant again? Absolutely. It was convenient, cheap and easy! My only wish is that they would add more routes so I could use it more often.

Read more about how I always score cheap flights here!