Trip Budget Calculator
Build a complete trip budget from transportation, lodging, food, activities, and souvenirs. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.
Formula
Total Budget = (Transport + Lodging + Food + Activities + Souvenirs + Insurance + Misc) x (1 + Emergency%)
The total trip budget sums all expense categories across travelers and days, then adds an emergency buffer percentage. Transportation and souvenirs are per-person costs, lodging is per-night, and food and activities are per-person per-day. The emergency fund provides a financial cushion for unexpected expenses.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Couple Weekend Getaway (3 Nights)
Problem: Two people take a 3-night trip. Flights cost $350/person, hotel is $180/night, food is $80/person/day, activities $40/person/day, $50/person souvenirs, no insurance. 10% emergency fund.
Solution: Transportation: $350 x 2 = $700\nLodging: $180 x 3 = $540\nFood: $80 x 2 x 4 days = $640\nActivities: $40 x 2 x 4 = $320\nSouvenirs: $50 x 2 = $100\nSubtotal = $2,300\nEmergency (10%) = $230\nTotal = $2,530
Result: Total Budget: $2,530 | Per Person: $1,265 | Per Day: $632.50
Example 2: Family Vacation (7 Nights, 4 Travelers)
Problem: Family of 4, 7-night trip. Flights $450/person, vacation rental $250/night, food $60/person/day, activities $35/person/day, $75/person souvenirs, $120/person insurance, $200 misc. 15% buffer.
Solution: Transportation: $450 x 4 = $1,800\nLodging: $250 x 7 = $1,750\nFood: $60 x 4 x 8 = $1,920\nActivities: $35 x 4 x 8 = $1,120\nSouvenirs: $75 x 4 = $300\nInsurance: $120 x 4 = $480\nMisc: $200\nSubtotal = $7,570\nEmergency (15%) = $1,136\nTotal = $8,706
Result: Total Budget: $8,706 | Per Person: $2,176 | Per Day: $1,088
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I create a realistic trip budget that covers everything?
A comprehensive trip budget should include seven major categories: transportation (flights, rental cars, gas, rideshares, parking), lodging (hotels, vacation rentals, hostels), food and dining (restaurants, groceries, snacks, drinks), activities and entertainment (tours, museum entries, excursions, shows), souvenirs and shopping, travel insurance, and miscellaneous expenses (tips, laundry, phone charges, baggage fees). Start by researching average costs in your destination city using travel blogs and price comparison sites. Always add a 10-15 percent emergency buffer for unexpected costs. The most commonly underbudgeted categories are food, ground transportation within the destination, and tips or gratuities, so pay special attention to those items.
What percentage of my trip budget should go to each category?
A typical vacation budget breakdown allocates roughly 30-40 percent to transportation (flights being the largest single expense), 25-35 percent to lodging, 15-20 percent to food and dining, 10-15 percent to activities and entertainment, and 5-10 percent to souvenirs and miscellaneous costs. These proportions shift based on destination and travel style. A road trip reduces transportation costs significantly while a luxury resort trip increases lodging to 40-50 percent. Budget travelers can reduce food costs to 10 percent by cooking at accommodations with kitchens. International trips in expensive cities like London or Tokyo tend to have higher food and activity percentages. Use these benchmarks as starting points and adjust based on your specific destination and priorities.
How much should I budget for food per day while traveling?
Daily food budgets vary dramatically by destination and dining style. In the United States, budget travelers can manage on $30-50 per day eating at casual restaurants and grocery stores, mid-range travelers spend $50-100, and those dining at upscale restaurants budget $100-200 or more. International destinations range from $10-20 per day in Southeast Asia and Central America to $80-150 in Western Europe and Japan. Breakfast at the hotel or accommodation saves significant money. One strategy is the 1-2-3 ratio: spend 1 unit on breakfast (simple), 2 units on lunch (moderate meal), and 3 units on dinner (best meal of the day). Factor in drinks, coffee, and snacks which can add 20-30 percent beyond meal costs alone.
How do I save money on transportation costs for a trip?
Transportation often consumes the largest portion of your trip budget, but several strategies can reduce costs significantly. For flights, book 6-8 weeks in advance for domestic trips and 2-3 months for international travel. Use flexible date searches to find the cheapest departure days, typically Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Consider alternative airports within driving distance of your destination. Sign up for fare alerts on Google Flights or Scott Cheap Flights for deal notifications. For ground transportation, compare rental car costs through aggregators, use public transit in cities with good systems, and walk when distances permit. Rideshare apps are often cheaper than taxis. If driving, calculate total fuel costs using current gas prices and your vehicle fuel efficiency rather than estimating.
How much emergency money should I set aside for a trip?
Financial experts recommend setting aside 10-20 percent of your total trip budget as an emergency fund. For a $3,000 trip, that means $300-600 in reserve. This covers unexpected expenses like medical situations, last-minute itinerary changes, missed connections, emergency gear purchases, and price increases you could not anticipate. Keep your emergency fund accessible through a combination of credit cards (which offer purchase protection and fraud coverage), a small amount of cash in local currency, and a debit card connected to your bank account. International travelers should also notify their bank of travel dates, carry cards from two different networks (Visa and Mastercard), and know their daily ATM withdrawal limits. Having a financial cushion reduces stress and allows you to handle surprises without ruining your trip experience.
How do I budget for a trip with multiple destinations?
Multi-destination trips require budgeting each stop separately since costs can vary dramatically between cities or countries. Create a daily budget for each location based on local prices for accommodation, food, and activities. Add inter-city transportation costs for flights, trains, or rental cars between destinations. Use the 50-30-20 time allocation guideline: spend 50 percent of your time in the primary destination, 30 percent in the secondary, and 20 percent in transit or shorter stops. Avoid the common mistake of cramming too many stops into a limited timeframe, which inflates transportation costs and reduces time actually enjoying each destination. For international multi-city trips, research visa requirements and entry fees for each country. Budget conversion apps help track spending across different currencies.