NerdWallet's Smart Money Podcast - How the Nerds Do It: How a Travel Nerd Books a Trip
Episode Date: October 13, 2022Points or cash. Bargain hunting or splurging. Deep research or impulse booking. A lot can go into booking the perfect vacation. In this episode of our “How the Nerds Do It” series, travel Nerd S...am Kemmis talks through how he books his vacations and how you can get into the points game yourself. To send the Nerds your money questions, call or text the Nerd hotline at 901-730-6373 or email podcast@nerdwallet.com. Like what you hear? Please leave us a review and tell a friend.
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Welcome to the NerdWallet Smart Money Podcast. I'm NerdWallet investing writer Alana Benson.
This episode, we're continuing our series called How the Nerds Do It, where we talk
with our nerds about how they personally tackle the issues they write about every day. This
week, we're talking with NerdWallet travel writer Sam Chemis. Sam is going to talk with
us about how he got started in the points game, how he finds great deals, and his favorite
travel secrets for travel nerds in the making. Hey, Sam, thanks for being on.
Hey, Alana, great to be here.
All right, so tell us about your history with travel. How did you get interested in points
rewards? What is the origin story of your journey with travel rewards?
Yeah, totally. I'll do the quick origin story. I'll do the whole
superhero movie background. The basic story is I was taking a flight to Bangkok on Emirates,
flying through Dubai, and I randomly got upgraded on my Seattle to Dubai leg. I got upgraded to
business class. And it was one of the best experiences of my life. I went from like
dreading this 14 hour flight to having a great time at the front of the plane. And I came out
of it being like, how do I do that again? And I knew that points and miles were a thing and I get
into things by my nature. And so I got really into figuring out points and miles. I also around that
time, this was about five, six years ago, got a remote job. And this was before everybody had a
remote job. So I decided to give up my apartment and travel full time. So I really wanted to
minimize my spending while I was traveling. And points and miles were a big part of that.
I've actually never been upgraded on a flight before.
You're lucky.
I want that experience. I want that moment and I've never had it. I might have to learn from you.
Yeah. Well, but the problem is you could never go back. Once you've been up there, then you know. And then it always feels somewhat inhumane to be
in a regular economy seat. But yeah, it's worth doing at some point in your life,
but you might as well wait. Yeah. I can see how you could get really used to it.
I'm getting married and then we're planning our honeymoon. We're going to go to Greece
for a couple of weeks. I'm going to be looking at your tips and then trying to personally plug
them in. Say you're getting ready for a big trip or if you wanted to help me plan my honeymoon,
where should we start the process? How I usually go about it is I usually say,
I want to go somewhere this fall. And then what I do, I either look around for deals using points and miles, I look at blogs
or forums, or I look for a cheap flight using cash.
And I might use a site like Secret Flying or Scott's Cheap Flights or something like
that.
Secret Flying and Scott's Cheap Flights.
Those are ones that I've never heard of.
And I imagine probably many of
our listeners have never heard of as well. Can you explain what exactly those are?
Yeah, so Scott's Cheap Flights is a travel newsletter. And they do lots of things. But
what it started with was this guy, Scott, and he sent out a list anytime there was a really great
deal on a flight. So I'd be like, hey, you can fly from New York to Athens for 300 bucks right now or whatever.
And then he built that out and has a whole team.
But you can basically put in your home airport
and they'll let you know when there's a really good deal
from your home airport.
Secret Flying is basically a website version of that.
I kind of like it because it's garage style,
like there are no frills to it.
But you can just go and see what good deals are out there right now. But the trick is,
you don't get to say, hey, I want to go to London September 18th through 23rd. What are the deals?
Right? It's like the inverse of that. It's like, here are the deals. Do you want to take one of
them? So it helps if you don't start with a more strict itinerary in mind. If you're like,
I want to go somewhere at roughly this time, that might be a better strategy.
If you're maximizing for finding deals, that's definitely the best way to do it. But that's not
how most people travel, right? And your honeymoon is a really good example of that. Very few people are going to say, for my honeymoon, I want to go somewhere cheap
at some time. Yeah. And we'll just see. I mean, that's totally how I would do it, but
I'm a freak. So that's how most people will. If you have a specific plan in mind,
my recommendation is just to use Google Flights for the flight side of it to get a kind of
snapshot view of what days might be cheapest to fly.
The reason I like Google Flights is it's super fast.
You can look at several dates very quickly and filter and sort however you want and get
a snapshot of like, OK, if we leave on this Tuesday, it's going to be like several hundred
bucks cheaper than if we leave on the Saturday or whatever. So that's usually my starting place. I use Google flights.
I see what days roughly are cheapest for when I want to fly. And then I'll compare those days
using my points and miles. So I'll be like, I would be flying on this like Saturday to this
Tuesday. Then let me go look at American Airlines to use my American Airlines miles and see roughly
how many miles it would cost to fly on those days.
And then I just do a little comparison shopping to be like, should I pay cash?
Should I use points and miles?
What should I do?
That's really interesting, right?
Because I don't think I would ever take that approach.
So you find the dates that might
be the cheapest. And then do you go to an airline that you have miles on? Or are you looking at any
airline? Yeah, it depends. But mostly I'll go to an airline that I have miles on. But you know,
I have miles on most airlines. But let's say you only had miles with Alaska or something,
I would go to Alaska and check the availability for those dates.
It gets a little more interesting and spicy if you have credit card miles or points,
because those can often transfer to lots of different airlines. So then it can get wild
because then it's like, okay, I could transfer to these 10 different airlines. Are you going to
check every single one of those
before you transfer the miles? And that's when we get really deep into the game.
We're right at the beginning of this process. And already, it seems like a pretty big time
commitment. If you're going to book a pretty big trip, roughly how much time do you think you spend
on looking for a good deal and planning it out just with booking the flights
or booking hotels as a time commitment? That's a great question. And I think one that's often
overlooked when people are talking about this stuff. For me, the time commitment is pretty big,
in part because I just like this stuff. It's part of my job. So I'm sort of learning something every time I do it, and I'm gathering more information. But if it's not your job, or not your hobby,
then I think it's really smart to think about this time trade off, right? You could spend 20 hours
finding the absolute best deal. But you have to ask yourself, are my 20 hours worth the incremental savings that I would
make finding that deal? And everyone's going to have a different cutoff there, right? For some
people, spending more than an hour looking for flights is just absolutely not going to be worth
it from a financial perspective and a mental health perspective. You know, some people just
hate doing that sort of thing. So it totally depends
on the itinerary and everything for me. But I could spend, I don't know, five hours on a big
trip, maybe comparison shopping. I'm also going to be tracking the prices over time and everything.
So it's hard to say exactly. But I strongly encourage most normal people to not get lost
in the wormhole of finding the perfect flight.
Yeah, I could see myself going down the rabbit hole.
But I've got another question.
So how do you leverage points versus dollars?
I think this is something that's really confusing for a lot of folks who are kind of new to
the travel rewards
game. It's the big question. And it's a lot of what I spend my time doing is trying to figure
out like how much are Alaska miles worth, how much are Hyatt points worth, that sort of thing.
Because what we really want to be able to do is say, okay, this flight either costs 300 bucks
or it costs 30,000 Delta miles, which one is a better deal, right?
And so a little plug, if you want an answer to that, you can just search for what are Delta
miles worth. And probably my article is going to be on the top of there along with a little
calculator that lets you compare it to the cash price. So go check out NerdWallet's airline and hotel point valuations. The short answer is you
should just do a little research, jot down the price with cash, jot down the price using miles,
and then go check how much the points or miles are worth and do the math. And just make sure
you're getting roughly the same value or above average for your points and miles booking, if that makes sense.
You don't need to get the absolute most value from your points and miles, but you want to make
sure you're not getting fleeced. Yeah. And it just seems like this goes back to what we were
saying about the time commitment. You can do this in a way where you are getting the top bullet
points of, is this a good value? Is this not? Or you can really go down the rabbit
hole. It's also easy to go down the rabbit hole of getting the most value by booking first and
business class fares, because a first class ticket across the globe can cost $10,000 or something
like that. So often using points or miles to book that instead, you're like, oh, I'm getting, you know,
three cents per mile, which is a great deal. But you got to ask yourself, would you spend
$10,000 on a flight? And if not, does it make sense to spend the miles?
Can you tell us about a trip that you did really well in terms of travel rewards,
and maybe one where that didn't go so well?
Yes. Yeah. You only ever hear about the good ones, right? One good one, it was my last big trip before COVID. I did a big birthday trip for my partner where we flew to London to visit some
friends and then we went to Mexico. And it was a combination of using points and miles for the airfare and hotels.
And I had this weird luxury travel subscription service called Inspirato that I had joined
that I was trying out, which in general was a mess.
And I had all sorts of issues with.
But for this trip, it worked perfectly because it basically let me stay at
super high end places in London and in Cabo. And then I got to fill in the blanks using points and
miles. So that was fun. And everything worked perfectly for that one. For a not so well one,
man, I've been planning this trip to Peru to do a meditation retreat that was supposed to be in May 2020.
And I booked a flight using Alaska miles.
But to do that on Latam, their partner that you can use Alaska miles on, you have to call them.
And it's a huge pain in the butt.
And every time I call them, the people on the other end don't really know how to do it.
And I end up waiting on hold or whatever.
So anyway, I booked this flight to Peru for May 2020.
Obviously had to cancel that and rebook.
And I've canceled and rebooked that five times now of COVID.
And I have to get on the phone and do the same thing.
And at this point, I'm an expert at how the program works.
And I have to like walk the person on the other end of the phone through how to do it.
But I have it booked for this September and October.
And I'm fingers crossed.
I really hope that that works out for you.
But I could totally see how that when you book on points or miles, and then you have
to go to cancel or you have to go to rebook something and then dealing with customer service folks who like maybe aren't even as familiar with the process as you are could get very frustrating.
Yeah, often it's very easy and you can do it all online.
It's part of why I like using points and miles.
But when it goes wrong, it really goes wrong.
Oh, definitely.
So now I kind of want to get into some like
things that non nerds might want to know from you. So what's a good travel secret that you've
learned from your time writing about travel rewards?
Buying egg salad sandwiches at 7-Elevens in Japan. Just kidding. That's what I told Sean
last time I was on the podcast and he didn't believe me. But the egg salad sandwiches at 7-Eleven in Japan are the best.
That's true.
I would say something actually useful that I've learned doing this is there's airline
elite status and hotel elite status that have names like Platinum and Diamond and all that
sort of thing.
And I went into it thinking that those were basically on equal footing and that
they both offered perks at roughly the same rate and all of that sort of thing. But what I found
is that airline elite status is really great. It offers lots of real perks, like getting upgraded
and lots of extra miles. Whereas hotel elite status, for the most part part is pretty underwhelming it maybe gives you a few
extra points you maybe occasionally get upgraded to a suite to me getting upgraded to a suite
at a hotel is not nearly as important as getting upgraded to first class on a flight the comfort
difference for me is not on par at all so yeah i think uh if I went back and told myself something, I would be like,
don't worry so much about hotel elite status, focus on airline elite status.
That makes so much sense too, because I am thinking about this really long flight that
I have coming up. If you're in a regular hotel room versus a really nice hotel room,
you're still probably going to sleep a similar way, but you are not going to sleep the same
on a economy ticket on
an airline versus a first class ticket. Totally. So I know we give a lot of advice on our website
and in our content. But is there any typical nerd wallet advice or tips that we give that you
ignore? Oh, all the tough questions here, Alana, because yes, there absolutely are.
One that I've been thinking about recently is one of my big pieces of advice and NerdWallet's
big piece of advice in general is to not hoard your points and miles, to spend your points and
miles rather than just collect a big stash of them. And this is for lots of reasons, but one
of them is that they devalue over time in general. I guess dollars do too, as we're all aware now, but the devaluation can
happen really suddenly. And it's basically just up to the company how they want to do it. So
it's usually not a great financial move to have a million points sitting in your account,
not doing anything. But during the pandemic, I have saved up a ton of points and miles and barely
spent any of them. So it's been my mission for the last two years to spend more than I earn on
points and miles, but I totally haven't been living up to that. Another one is that we've
really been highlighting how Airbnbs are not as financially advantageous compared to hotels as a lot of people think
Airbnbs and other vacation rentals. I wrote an article recently about how Airbnb just kind of
isn't as good as it used to be. And that people haven't quite realized that yet. But I still find
myself in situations all the time where I just need to book an Airbnb because I can't find a hotel option
that's at all reasonable. So are you saying that hotels might even be less expensive than Airbnbs
in some cases? In lots of cases, yeah. And part of that is just it's a lot. Well, you can use
points with hotels, which you can't with Airbnbs. But also there's just all of these hidden fees
with Airbnbs now like cleaning fees and service fees and
lots of other fees that are really hard to compare against each other because Airbnb basically has a
monopoly. So unlike a hotel, which they're all competing with each other and in search results
and everything like that, Airbnb is basically just competing with itself. And so the consumer
is really starting to hurt from that monopoly. That's great advice.
I will definitely take that.
What are your takeaway tips?
One, just try to get above average value from your points and miles, but don't get obsessive
about it.
Don't try to find like the absolute best use of your points and miles.
If it gives you good value, go ahead and book it.
Another one, use Google Flights to get a big picture sense of what the prices are like,
and then dig in from there to compare, maybe even using other search engines or using points
and miles.
And finally, follow the deals.
Don't just hope that deals will magically appear where and when you want to travel,
but find good deals and then decide to
travel to those places at those times. Thank you so much, Sam. We really appreciate you talking
with us today. I'm so happy to be here. And that's all we have for this episode. Do you have a money
question of your own? Turn to the nerds and call or text us your questions at 901-730-6373. That's 901-730-NERD.
You can also email us at podcast at nerdwallet.com.
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