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Budget Travel

— Seeing the world without breaking the bank
81 members Created Apr 2026

Controversial: rail pass peaked years ago

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Budget travel and the question of when to spend more — specific situations where the upgrade is always correct.

Bed quality on overnight journeys over 10 hours: the difference between a lie-flat sleeper berth and a reclined seat on a 14-hour bus is the difference between arriving functional and arriving wrecked. The upgrade from economy class seating to a sleeper on an Indian train (SL to 3AC class, usually $5-8 more) is always correct.

First night's accommodation after a long international flight: the budget dorm on the night you're running on no sleep and maximum disorientation is the wrong context for hostel socializing. A private room for the first night after an intercontinental flight costs $10-15 more and is worth it every time.

Travel insurance for any medical risk destination: covered elsewhere but bears repeating in this context. The upgrade from 'no insurance' to 'adequate insurance' for a $45-80 premium is always correct.

Boots or shoes for the Camino de Santiago or any multi-week hiking route: already covered above. $100-150 in proper footwear prevents $200+ in blister treatment and potentially an abandoned trip. Always spend the money.

Reputable transport for night journeys in higher-risk areas: the difference between a known safe overnight bus company and the cheapest possible operator in a region with road safety concerns is $10-20. This is the correct upgrade.

First visit to a country or city: invest in one quality guided experience (a food tour, a walking tour with a genuinely knowledgeable guide, a cultural experience with proper context). The first visit frames everything that follows.

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