How to Budget for a Vacation (with Example & Free Calculator)

How to Budget for a Vacation (with Example & Free Calculator)

My first international trip was Thailand with friends, and let’s just say none of us knew what we were doing. We booked the flights, showed up in Bangkok with minimal plan, and spent money like the exchange rate was working in our favor — it was not. Street food was cheap, sure, but the rest of it? Tuk-tuks, entrance fees, a tour package we definitely didn’t need, and way too much shopping because “it’s so affordable here.” We came home happy, broke, and mildly embarrassed about how little we’d thought it through.

That trip taught me more about vacation budgeting than anything else — mostly by showing me every way to get it wrong. So here’s the guide we should’ve read before we landed.

Set Your Total Budget Before You Plan Anything

20%
How much most budgets underestimate the real trip cost
3–6
Months recommended to start saving before you travel
10%
Buffer to add on top of your estimate for surprises
 

Most people do this backwards — they pick a destination, fall in love with a hotel, and then try to figure out if they can afford it. A better approach is to decide on a ceiling before you look at a single flight price. Once you have a number, everything else becomes a decision about how to allocate it: spend less on accommodation so you can eat well, or protect the budget for one big experience and keep daily costs lean. You’re making deliberate trade-offs instead of just hoping it adds up.

A reasonable starting point if you have no idea where to begin: keep annual vacation spending within 5–10% of your take-home income. It’s not a hard rule, but it’s a useful gut check before you commit to anything.

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Break Your Budget Down by Category

A rough vacation budget by category helps you see where your money is going before you spend it. The six main buckets are transport, accommodation, food, local getting-around, activities, and a buffer. Here’s roughly how those tend to split across most trips.

Transport
30–35%
Accommodation
25–30%
Food & Drinks
20–25%
Activities
10–15%
Misc & Buffer
~10%

These will change depending on your destination and travel style. An international trip budget weights transport heavily. A beach vacation budget might lean into accommodation. A domestic vacation cost estimate is almost always lower simply because there’s no long-haul flight eating a third of your total.

CategoryWhat to includeHow to estimate
✈️ TransportFlights, trains, airport transfersPer person × travelers
🏨 AccommodationHotel/rental + taxes, cleaning feesPer night × nights
🍜 Food & DrinksMeals, coffee, snacks, alcoholPer person per day
🚌 Local TransportSubway, taxis, rental car + fuelPer person per day
🎭 ActivitiesEntry fees, tours, day tripsPer person
⚠️ Buffer10% of everything aboveTotal × 0.10

One thing worth checking early: transport costs. Flights are the most time-sensitive line item in any vacation budget — a route that costs $400 in January can cost $700 for the same seats in March. You don’t have to book immediately, but getting a realistic price early keeps your total estimate grounded.

Travel Budget Example

Here’s an example: two friends, 8 days in Thailand, mid-range travel — decent hotels, restaurants, the occasional tour. This is the kind of trip most people picture when they start Googling flights.

First draft budget — the stuff most people think to include:

That feels manageable. But here’s what didn’t make the first draft:

Category How it’s calculated Per person
Flights Round trip, economy $550
Accommodation $70/night hotel ÷ 2, × 8 nights $280
Food & drinks $45/day × 8 days $360
Local transport $12/day × 8 days $96
Activities & tours Island day trip, temples, snorkeling $150
Shopping & souvenirs Markets, gifts $80
First estimate total $1,516

The costs most people forget:

Forgotten cost Notes Per person
Overweight baggage fees Round trip, checked bag each $65
Tips Guides, drivers, housekeeping over 8 days $60
ATM and currency exchange fees Multiple withdrawals, backup card fees $45
Local SIM card 8-day data plan $15
Pre-trip spending Sunscreen, adapters, toiletries, walking shoes $95
Pet sitting 8 nights kennel boarding $120
Public toilet fees $1 per visit, multiple times daily $20
Hidden hotel fees City tax and resort fee across 8 nights $55
Replacement items Forgotten charger, umbrella, extra layer $40
Hidden costs subtotal $515
Summary Per person For 2 friends
First estimate $1,516 $3,032
Hidden costs $515 $1,030
10% buffer $203 $406
Real total $2,234 $4,468

That’s $718 more per person than the first estimate — nearly 47% higher. Not because the trip changed, but because the first draft left out almost everything that doesn’t show up on a booking confirmation. The hidden costs alone came to over $500 per person, and most of those are things that feel too small to plan for until you’re actually paying them.

🌍
Want to spend less without skipping the good stuff? How to Travel on a Budget — practical ways to cut costs on every category above.
 

The Costs Most People Forget to Budget For

This is where most vacation budgets fall apart. People plan carefully for the obvious stuff and then get hit by a string of smaller expenses they never wrote down. These are the ones that show up most often.

Overweight or Extra Baggage Fees

Most airlines charge separately for checked bags, and if your bag comes in overweight at the airport scale, the fee on the spot is usually much higher than if you’d paid in advance. On a round trip with two people, baggage fees alone can add $100–$200 that never made it into the original estimate. Always check the airline’s baggage policy when you search for flights, not after you’ve booked.

Tipping

Tipping norms vary widely around the world, and it’s one of the most consistently forgotten line items. In many destinations, tipping is expected for tour guides, drivers, hotel housekeeping, and restaurant staff. A rough starting point is $5–$10 per person per day, but in places where tipping culture is strong, it adds up faster than you’d think across an eight-day trip.

ATM and Currency Exchange Fees

This one can catch you off guard in a frustrating way. The card you planned to use for travel might not work at every ATM abroad — and when that happens, you end up reaching for another card that charges full foreign transaction fees plus the ATM operator’s fee on top. It happened on a trip where the designated travel card got declined at multiple machines, and every withdrawal on the backup card came with a cost. Over a week, those fees stacked up to way more than expected. Having at least two cards that work internationally, and knowing the fee structure of each, saves a lot of pain.

SIM Card or International Roaming

Your home plan probably doesn’t cover international data cheaply, or at all. A local SIM at your destination typically costs $5–$20 and gives you data at local rates, which you genuinely need for navigation, messaging, and ride-share apps when you’re somewhere unfamiliar. If swapping SIMs isn’t convenient, an eSIM or international add-on from your carrier works too — just check the price before you land, not after you’ve been roaming for a day.

Pre-Trip Spending

New luggage, travel adapters, sunscreen, a comfortable pair of walking shoes, and a travel-sized toiletry kit all come out of your pocket before the trip even starts. These feel like household purchases, not vacation spending, which is exactly why they never make it into the budget. If you don’t already own most of it, add $50–$200 for pre-trip prep.

Pet Sitting or House Care

If you have a pet, someone needs to look after it while you’re away. Kennel boarding, in-home pet sitting, or asking a friend to help — these all come with a cost, and they can easily run $20–$80 per day depending on where you live and what your pet needs. It almost never makes it into a first-draft vacation budget.

Money to Use Public Toilets

In many countries across Europe, Southeast Asia, and beyond, public toilets charge a small fee — usually $0.50–$1.50 per visit. It sounds trivial until you’re traveling for eight days and paying multiple times a day across two people. Over a full trip it’s a real, recurring expense that most travel budgets completely ignore.

Parking in Big Cities

If you’re driving any part of your trip and passing through major cities, parking can be genuinely expensive. City-center parking in popular destinations often runs $20–$50 per day, and if you’re not budgeting for it, it comes as a shock every time. It’s worth researching parking costs for anywhere you plan to drive, especially overnight stays.

Hidden Hotel Fees

The nightly rate you see when you book is often not the full price. Resort fees, city taxes, tourist levies, cleaning fees, and charges for Wi-Fi or pool access get added at checkout in a lot of destinations. Always look for the total price including taxes and fees when booking, and don’t be surprised if it runs 15–20% higher than the advertised rate.

Items You Need to Replace or Forgot to Pack

A charger left at home, a toiletry that got flagged at security, a piece of clothing that wasn’t warm enough, an umbrella bought in the rain — these small replacement purchases happen on almost every trip. They’re not big individually, but across a week with two people they tend to add $30–$80 without anyone noticing until the bank statement arrives.

Build a Vacation Savings Plan

Once you know your total, the math is straightforward: subtract what you’ve already saved, then divide the remainder by the number of months until you leave. That’s your monthly savings target. If it feels unmanageable, you either need more time, a lower budget, or a different destination. If it looks doable, you have a plan.

Trip CostSave over 3 monthsSave over 6 monthsSave over 12 months
$1,000$333/mo$167/mo$83/mo
$2,500$833/mo$417/mo$208/mo
$5,000$1,667/mo$833/mo$417/mo
$10,000$3,333/mo$1,667/mo$833/mo

Keep this money in a dedicated account — ideally one with a decent interest rate — separate from your everyday spending. Treating it like a sinking fund for your vacation, where a fixed amount goes in each month and stays there, is the most reliable way to hit your goal. If you want to save for travel fast, redirect any windfalls straight into the fund: tax refunds, bonuses, or any income you weren’t counting on in your regular budget.

Tips to Keep Your Vacation Costs Down

Check flight prices early

Flight prices are the most volatile cost in any travel budget and tend to rise closer to departure. Checking early, even before you’re ready to book, gives you a realistic baseline. Budget airlines can look cheap on the surface but often charge separately for bags, seats, and priority boarding — always calculate the all-in cost before comparing fares.

Be honest about your food budget

Food is one of the easiest costs to underestimate. A rough benchmark for how much to budget for food on vacation is $50–$80 per person per day in most higher-cost countries, less in Southeast Asia or Latin America. One nice dinner, a couple of drinks, and a morning coffee can get you to $100 without it feeling like a splurge, so plan for at least one or two above-average days rather than assuming every meal will be cheap.

Get a travel-friendly bank card

A card with no foreign transaction fees and ATM reimbursements can save $30–$80 on a two-week international trip. It’s a one-time decision that pays off every day you’re away without requiring any extra effort once you have it.

Protect the budget for your must-dos

Before you leave, write down the two or three experiences you’d genuinely regret missing. Protect the money for those first and treat everything else as flexible. It’s the most practical way to make sure your budget goes where it actually matters to you.

Don’t skip travel insurance

A missed connection, a medical visit, a lost bag, or a last-minute cancellation can cost far more than the premium. A basic policy typically runs 2–5% of your total trip cost — on a $3,000 trip, that’s $60–$150. It’s worth it.

Before You Book the Flights

That Thailand trip with friends was a lot of things — fun, chaotic, memorable — but “well-budgeted” was not one of them. We figured it out eventually, mostly by overspending first and learning from it after. You don’t have to do it that way. The difference between coming home happy and coming home stressed about money isn’t how much you spent — it’s whether you knew what you were getting into before you left. Run the numbers, account for the stuff nobody warns you about, and give yourself a savings plan that actually fits your timeline. The trip will still surprise you. Just try not to let the bill be one of those surprises.