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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowAmericans aren't in the mood to spend much on travel this summer.
More people are expected to hit the road than did last year, but their budgets will be tighter because of high unemployment,
stock markets in retreat and a still-fragile economy.
AAA estimates families will spend an average of $809 on summer travel, compared with $876 in 2009, even though flying is
more expensive than it was a year ago.
They're knocking down the cost, travel agents say, by staying closer to home, choosing less-expensive modes of transportation
or by picking destinations based on the best fares and lodging they can find.
In summers past, Dennis Chang and his family visited Disney World or Jamaica. But this year, with his wife recently out of
work, the 33-year-old clothing designer from Laurel, Md., says the family is scaling back.
The more likely destination for this summer is Virginia Beach, Va., a four-hour drive away, with sandwiches in the car and
hunting for discounted tickets to theme parks along the route.
Debbie Dixson, an airline bag checker from St. Louis, can get cheap tickets to New York or Paris through her job. But the
cost of food, lodging and entertainment in a big city would quickly wipe out whatever she saved. So she and her husband will
instead drive to Douglas, Mich., to meet their six kids for a week's stay in a cabin along Lake Michigan.
While the economy is recovering, travel has bounced back slowly, says Steve Piraino, senior economist at IHS Global Insight.
His firm attributes it to high unemployment, still hovering near 10 percent.
Hotels and resorts are trying to entice people into longer stays with lower rates or discounts to restaurants and spas. As
a result, the average room rate is down slightly to about $95, according to travel research firm STR. It was $107 just two
years ago.
In states from Texas to Florida that are threatened by the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, resorts are offering free golf and complimentary
room nights. Some have promised a full refund if the oil hits popular beaches.
Some theme parks are offering specials on traditionally slower days. At Hersheypark in Pennsylvania, guests who stay three
nights or more at can buy a special $89.95 pass good for unlimited trips to the theme park, zoo, botanical garden and museum.
A standard one-day pass is $52.95.
The vast majority of Americans drive to their summer vacation spots, and they should get a break at the pump in the weeks
ahead. The nationwide average for gas is $2.76 a gallon, and analysts think it could fall as low as $2.65 by July 4.
Auto club AAA says about 28 million Americans will take road trips over the Memorial Day holiday weekend, 1.6 million more
than last year. About 2.15 million will fly, up slightly from a year ago.
For fliers, finding a deal will be more difficult. During the recession, airlines cut back on the number of planes they fly,
and fewer available seats means higher fares. From June through August, domestic airfares are 24 percent higher than last
year, averaging $321 per round trip, according to fare-tracking website Bing Travel.
Not everyone is cutting back, of course, particularly young professionals, people with stable jobs and the affluent, according
to recent travel surveys. "I usually take a weeklong vacation, but this time I'm gone for two weeks," lobbying
firm employee Debra Saiki of Honolulu, while waiting recently at Boston's South Station to catch an Amtrak train to New
York.
If the job market improves, more people will be able to travel, Piraino's firm says. And they'll spend more to do
so. But until then, Chang and many others will reluctantly opt for the steering wheel instead of a fold-down tray table.
"We're usually a flying family," he said. "I don't like to drive more than an hour."
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