Travel Budget Calculator

Plan every dollar of your trip — flights, hotel, food, activities, and more. Compare budget styles and track spending.

Trip Details

Quick Presets
Trip Basics
One-Time Costs
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Daily Costs
$
$
$
$
$
Optional Add-ons
Contingency Buffer

Total Trip Budget

$0
for 1 traveler · 7 days
Per Day
$0
Per Person
$0
Flights
$0
Accommodation
$0
Food Total
$0
Buffer + Extras
$0
Spending Breakdown
* Rates approximate. Verify before booking.

Travel Style Comparison

Budget Travel
$0
 · 
Hostels, street food, free attractions
Your Plan
$0
 · 
Based on your current inputs
Luxury
$0
 · 
5-star hotels, fine dining, guided tours

Cost Sensitivity Matrix

How your total budget changes across trip lengths and buffer percentages. LowHigh

Goal Seeker — How many days can I afford?

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Enter a budget limit to see how many days you can afford.

Duration Sensitivity — Budget by Trip Length

Cost Breakdown by Category

CategoryDaily CostTrip TotalPer Person% of Budget

Log your actual spending to track against your planned budget in real time.

Add Expense

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How to Use the Travel Budget Calculator

1

Pick a destination

Select one of 15 preset destinations for realistic cost estimates, or enter your own custom values.

2

Set your trip details

Enter trip length, number of travelers, and hotel rooms. Costs auto-calculate instantly.

3

Add extras & buffer

Toggle travel insurance and visa fees, then choose a 10–25% contingency buffer for surprises.

4

Analyze & track

Use the Analyze tab for scenario comparison and the Expense Tracker to log real spending.

Budget Formulas

Total Budget= (Flights × Travelers) + (Hotel × Rooms × Days) + (Food + Activities + Transport + Misc) × Days × Travelers) × (1 + Buffer%)
Per Day= Total ÷ Days
Per Person= Total ÷ Travelers

Key Terms

Buffer
A contingency percentage added to cover unexpected costs — currency shifts, medical, delays.
Daily Rate
Total trip cost divided by number of days — useful for comparing destinations.
Per Capita
Cost per traveler — total budget divided by the number of people.
Fixed Costs
One-time costs that don't change with trip length: flights, visa fees, travel insurance.
Variable Costs
Daily costs that scale with duration: hotel, food, transport, activities.
Sensitivity Matrix
A table showing how budget changes across different combinations of days and buffer %.

Real-World Examples

Week in Paris

Flight $800 + Hotel $180/night + Food $80/day + Activities $60/day + Transport $20/day × 7 days = ~$2,900 + 15% buffer = $3,335

Bali on a Budget

Flight $1,000 + Hotel $60/night + Food $20/day + Activities $30/day + Transport $10/day × 14 days = ~$2,560

NYC Weekend for 2

Flights $600 + Hotel $250/night + Food $70/day + Activities $80/day + Transport $20/day × 3 days = ~$2,130 total ($1,065/person)

How to Budget for International Travel

Effective travel budgeting starts with separating fixed costs (flights, visa fees, travel insurance) from variable daily costs (accommodation, food, activities, transport). Fixed costs are paid once regardless of trip length — extending your trip by a few days dramatically reduces the per-day cost of flights.

Research is essential: Numbeo provides real cost-of-living data by city, Skyscanner and Google Flights show fare trends, and Booking.com lets you filter by price tier. Always add a 15–20% contingency buffer — currency fluctuations, unexpected transportation, and medical costs are common travel surprises.

A proven budgeting rule: spend no more than 50% of your daily budget on accommodation. This preserves flexibility for food and experiences, which create the most memorable moments. Group travelers should also consider vacation rentals (Vrbo, Airbnb) which often cost less than multiple hotel rooms and offer kitchen access to reduce food spending.

Frequently Asked Questions

How accurate are travel budget estimates?

Estimates based on destination averages are typically accurate within 15–25%. Costs vary significantly by season, accommodation type, and personal spending habits. Use the presets as starting points and adjust based on your research.

Should I include travel insurance in my budget?

Yes — travel insurance typically costs 4–8% of total trip cost and covers medical emergencies, trip cancellations, and lost luggage. It's strongly recommended for international travel, especially with flights over $500.

How much buffer should I add?

15–20% is standard for international travel. For destinations with volatile prices, known tourist surcharges, or areas requiring cash (taxis, street vendors), consider 25%.

Why does this calculator multiply transport by number of travelers?

Local transport (metro, buses, taxis) is typically paid per person. The calculator multiplies transport costs by travelers to give an accurate group total. If your group shares taxis everywhere, your actual transport costs may be lower.

Does this calculator account for currency exchange?

Yes — use the currency selector to display totals in USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD, CAD, MXN, or THB. Rates are approximate; always verify current rates before booking. Also budget 1–3% for exchange rate losses when using cards abroad.

What's the cheapest time to fly internationally?

Shoulder season (spring and fall) offers the best combination of price and weather. Book 6–8 weeks in advance for domestic flights and 3–6 months for international. Tuesday/Wednesday departures are often cheaper.

How should I split hotel costs for groups?

Enter the hotel cost per room and set the Rooms field to how many rooms your group needs. The calculator multiplies rooms × nights to get total accommodation. Set Rooms to 1 if your group shares a single room.

How do I budget for food while traveling?

A practical guide: $15–25/day for budget travel (street food, local markets), $40–65/day for mid-range (sit-down restaurants), $80–150/day for high-end dining in expensive cities like Paris, Tokyo, or Zurich.

What hidden costs do travelers forget?

Common forgotten costs: airport transfers, checked baggage fees, city tourist taxes, tips and gratuities, SIM card or data roaming, medication, travel adapters, and souvenirs. The Misc budget category helps capture these.

Is it cheaper to book a package tour?

Package tours can save 10–20% on flights and hotels combined but reduce flexibility. They work well for popular all-inclusive destinations like Cancún or beach resorts, less so for city exploration trips.

How can I save money on activities?

Book in advance for discounts, use city passes (Paris Museum Pass, London Explorer Pass), prioritize free attractions like parks and free museum days, and check Viator, GetYourGuide, or Groupon for deals.

What's the best credit card for travel?

Cards with no foreign transaction fees (Chase Sapphire Preferred, Capital One Venture) save 1–3% on every purchase abroad. Travel cards also often include trip cancellation insurance and lost luggage reimbursement.

How do I budget for a multi-city trip?

Run the calculator separately for each city leg, then sum the totals. Inter-city transport (trains, regional flights, buses) should be treated as one-time fixed costs — enter them in the Flights field for each leg.

Should I budget differently for solo vs group travel?

Solo travel typically costs more per person for accommodation (no room-sharing) but gives you full flexibility. Groups save significantly on hotel by sharing rooms — set Travelers and Rooms in the calculator to see the difference.

How do I track spending while traveling?

Use the Expense Tracker tab to log actual expenses by category and date. It shows your remaining budget and budget vs actual comparison chart in real time. You can export your expense log as a CSV for further analysis.