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Budget Travel7 min read

Budget Airlines Worth Flying: Our Honest Reviews

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Zoheb Alvi

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Budget travel is not about deprivation—it is about optimization. The best budget travelers are not eating ramen in hostels reluctantly; they are strategically allocating their money (and points) to maximize the experiences that matter while cutting costs on the things that do not. This guide on budget airlines worth flying: our honest reviews shows you how to travel well for less.

The Budget Mindset

The fundamental shift: stop thinking about travel as a luxury expense and start thinking about it as a skill that improves with practice. Every trip teaches you something about finding deals, navigating new places efficiently, and identifying where to spend and where to save.

The three pillars of budget travel:

  1. Airfare optimization: Use points, mistake fares, and flexible dates to reduce your biggest cost to near-zero
  2. Accommodation strategy: Mix hostels, budget hotels on points, house-sitting, and homestays based on the situation
  3. On-the-ground efficiency: Eat local, use public transit, and prioritize free experiences (parks, museums, walking tours, cultural events)

Getting There Cheap

Points-Based Strategy

Even budget travelers should be earning transferable credit card points. A $0 annual fee card like the Chase Freedom Unlimited (1.5x on everything) or Bilt Mastercard (1x on rent) generates points that transfer to airline partners for free flights.

With 30,000–40,000 points, you can book:

  • Round-trip economy to Europe via Flying Blue promo awards
  • Round-trip economy to the Caribbean on British Airways Avios
  • One-way domestic flights on United for 5,500–10,000 miles

Cash Fare Strategies

  • Budget carriers: Norse Atlantic, PLAY, JetBlue, Southwest, Frontier, and Spirit offer fares 40–60% below legacy carriers. The key is understanding what is included and what costs extra (bags, seats, food).
  • Mistake fares: Set alerts on Pointify for your dream destinations. When a mistake fare drops, book immediately and plan the trip later.
  • Positioning flights: Sometimes it is cheaper to take a $50 bus to a nearby city and fly from there. Compare origin airports within a 3-hour radius.
  • Shoulder season: Travel in the weeks just before or after peak season for 30–50% lower fares and fewer crowds.

Sleeping Cheap

Hostels

Modern hostels are not the grimy backpacker dorms of the 2000s. Many offer private rooms, co-working spaces, bars, and organized social events. Expect to pay $15–40/night for a dorm bed and $40–80 for a private room in most destinations. Hostels are best for solo travelers and those who value social connection.

Budget Hotels on Points

IHG Holiday Inn and Holiday Inn Express properties are bookable for 10,000–25,000 IHG points per night. With the IHG Premier card (earning 10x on IHG), a few hotel stays generate enough points for several free nights. Hyatt Place and Hyatt House properties fall into Category 1–3 (5,000–12,000 points/night) and offer reliable quality.

Alternative Accommodations

  • House-sitting: Platforms like TrustedHousesitters connect travelers with homeowners who need pet care. Free accommodation in exchange for watching a house and pets.
  • Couchsurfing: Free stays with locals. The experience is as much cultural exchange as accommodation.
  • Work exchanges: Workaway and WWOOF connect travelers with hosts who offer free room and board in exchange for 4–5 hours of daily work.

Eating Well for Less

  • Markets and grocery stores: Buy breakfast and lunch supplies at local markets. Restaurant meals can be reserved for dinner.
  • Street food: In Southeast Asia, Mexico, India, and many other regions, street food is not just cheap—it is the best food available.
  • Lunch specials: Many restaurants offer set lunch menus at 30–50% of dinner prices for the same quality food.
  • Water: Carry a reusable water bottle with a filter (LifeStraw, Grayl) to avoid buying bottled water.

Free Experiences

The best things in most cities are free:

  • Walking tours (tip-based free walking tours exist in most major cities)
  • Parks and gardens (Central Park, Luxembourg Gardens, Hyde Park, etc.)
  • Museums on free days (many museums offer free admission one day per week or month)
  • Religious and cultural sites (temples, churches, mosques are generally free to visit)
  • Hiking and nature (trails, beaches, viewpoints)

The Budget Travel Toolkit

  • Pointify Search: Compare fares across 300+ airlines and find the cheapest options
  • Price Alerts: Get notified when fares drop on your dream routes
  • Travel Wallet: Track your points balances and optimize card spending

Budget travel is a skill, and like any skill, it gets better with practice. Start with Pointify Search to find your next affordable adventure.

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Written by Zoheb Alvi

The Pointify Research Team analyzes loyalty programs, fare data, and booking strategies across 300+ airlines and 25 award programs. Our goal: help you get maximum value from every point and mile.

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