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When youâre deep into the semester and maybe exams, your future travel and vacations are likely not high priority. But the summer is not so far away, and looking forward to it can feel good now, as well as helping to set you up for a change of scene later. Most students want to travel, according to a recent CampusWell survey. And youâre pretty clear that the benefits of travel (including study abroad programs) go way deeper than a tan.* âI feel like I am a much better person when I travel more,â says Molly D., a student at Humboldt State University in California. âTravel encourages me to appreciate the unknown while recognizing the familiar,â says Joe Foley, a second-year undergraduate at American University in Washington DC, who in 2014 became the youngest-ever National Geographic Traveler of the Year.
Whatâs blocking your exit route? Not surprisingly, by far the biggest barrier to travel is cost. âYou need to have money saved up to cover airfares, accommodations, food, and other expenses. As a student, itâs very difficult to do this,â says Alejandro C., a third-year undergraduate at the University of California, Irvine. In our survey, 93 percent of students who responded said lack of funds was a barrier; only 4 percent said they were uncomfortable with the prospect of unfamiliar places.
*And, by the way, thereâs no such thing as a healthy tan. Use SPF 30+, whatever your skin color or tone.
âThe cost of taking an airplane is a huge hassle. However, whatâs living if you donât spend your money to experience new things and go to new places?â
âSteven M., fourth-year undergraduate, University of Massachusetts Amherst
âHow resourceful can you be when youâre out of money and 4,000 miles away from home? Do you panic? Do you run to the consulate? Do you go native? You learn that you can wash your undies in a hotel bathroom in Rome without embarrassment. You realize that street food really is the most delicious cuisine youâll ever stuff in your face. Travel will grind you down to your truest self. Whether that is good or bad really is up to the person. In addition, foreign candy is legit way better. So the downside is youâll never be happy with a SnickersâĒ again.â
âLori T., third-year graduate student, San Diego State University, California
âTravel is the adventure of a new place and new people. Shortly after the earthquake in Haiti, I went on a cruise that visited a private beach in Haiti. I was taking an excursion to zip line across the ocean, which was amazing, but on the drive there, we drove through some rural areas of Haiti. Seeing the devastation of the population was just as impactful as the zip lining was. Now Iâm all about helping people who need the help!â
âLaura B., second-year undergraduate, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador
âI love airports, planes, train stations, subways and underground metro systems, meeting new people, and dancing the night away.â
âSarah A., third-year undergraduate, Saint Maryâs University, Minnesota
âTraveling is great because it can be as simple or as elaborate as you want. It can be a road trip to a different city or it can be a cruise or it can be a plane ride to a new countryâthereâs an option for many budgets and comfort zones!â
âTaylor R., fourth-year undergraduate, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, New York
âTravel experiences are built by the little things. The smiles, the first bite of a foreign countryâs food, the hostel chitchat. Although the globalized world of Facebook, the golden arches, and American TV shows exist in every major city, the local cultures remain vibrant. The world today is as fascinating as itâs always been, and in most places itâs safer than ever to be a tourist. Travel gives us the thrill of adventure and somewhere new while reminding us of our shared humanity across cultures and encouraging us to push our horizons.â
âJoe Foley, second-year undergraduate, American University, Washington DC; National Geographic Traveler of the Year 2014
âItâs cool to immerse yourself in other cultures and environments around the world or in your own hometown. Just make sure to learn a bit of history, culture, customs, and experience non-touristy activities in addition to the well-known attractions.â
âAmy N., fourth-year undergraduate, Western Washington University
âYou learn more through experience than books or articles.â
âSarah M., third-year undergraduate, Millersville University, Pennsylvania
Before you go
Check which currencies are performing badly against the dollarâyour money buys more in those places.
If you need vaccinations, go to your student health center.
Check the insurance that comes with your credit card. Check your health plan for international coverage too.
Let your bank and credit card company know your travel plans so your account isnât flagged for fraud and possibly blocked.
When you go
Search online for free stuff to do in any tourist-friendly city (e.g., âMontreal freeâ).
Electronic guidebooks and maps (not books) reduce the schlep factor. Use Google Maps offline by typing âOK mapsâ in the search bar; the current area will be saved.
Check the comments on Foursquare for passwords of free Wi-Fi in local shops and cafÃĐs.
Keep your electronics charged. If youâre going international, bring a converter outlet plug.
Source: Student Health 101 survey, January 2017
âTime lost that you could spend working to help pay down outrageous college debts.â
âColin D., second-year undergraduate, Millersville University, Pennsylvania
âYour body might not be prepared for the different illnesses and pathogens in other countries.â [Ask at the student health center about vaccinations and preventive medications.] âDomo E., third-year undergraduate, University of Hawaii at Manoa
âThe paperwork for international travel. The visas help keep track of visitors, but at the same time, itâs like having to complete a totally different job just to earn the right to relax from your normal one.â
âTyler S., third-year undergraduate, University of the District of Columbia
âLooking at your depleted bank account.â
âJonathan L., fifth-year undergraduate, California State University, San Marcos
âPacking. It seems you never pack enough, even though you have five bags for a weekend trip, but then you still end up leaving something important at home. Then, in the end, you only needed like a quarter of what you packed!â
âVerronika L., graduate student, Barry University, Florida
âNever wear heels when you have a short layover. If your first flight is delayed in air, and you have to run to your connecting [flight], heels are not conductive to that.â
âAshe M., second-year undergraduate, Lakehead University, Ontario
Tips
Flexible fliers get the best last-minute fares; be open to a variety of destinations.
Use a travel search engine: ThriftyNomads.com recommends Skyscanner, Airfarewatchdog, Google Flights, and several others.
Try searching for airfare deals around 1 a.m. The unsold deals from the day before will be reposted.
Before buying any ticket to anywhere, check for student discounts.
Keep your online searches incognito to find the lowest price.
Donât make the mistakes everyone else makes.
Be smart about budget airlines.
Get cheaper domestic flights in other countries.
Find the best way to get where youâre going.
Best sites & tools
Kayakâs Explore
Find out how far your money can take you
Adioso
Sort fares from your city by price
Get the Flight Out – free iOS app
The cheapest fares leaving from your city today
STA Travel
Expert travel itineraries and student discounts
Student Universe
Lower-cost airfares for students
One Travel
Cheaper flights for students
More cool tools
See Find out more today.
Hotels, hovels, homes, & habitats
Homestay.com
Stay with a family who lives in the city youâre traveling to
Couchsurfing
Be a guest at someoneâs house; check out the reviews
HomeAway
Find over a million rental lodges, which may offer more space than hotels
TripAdvisor
Recommendations and red flags from real people
Airbnb
B&Bs, apartments, and spare rooms for rent; try to negotiate the price.
Hostels.com
35,000 hostels in 180 countries (including US)
Hostelling International USA
Youth-geared US hostels
Hotels.com
Need a place tonight? Deals start at 50 percent off
Reserve America
Beautifully habitable campgrounds across the US
National Park Service
Americaâs best idea (reallyâthe best)
Recreation.gov
Way more to do than you realized
More cool tools
See Find out more today.
Be a better person
Most students who participated in an international exchange program felt it helped them become more trusting, open-minded, flexible, confident, and tolerant, says a 2006 study by the International Student Travel Confederation.
Go global
Students expect travel to make them more âglobalââin other words, expand their knowledge, perspective, and social and cultural connections, according to a small study at California Polytechnic State University (2010).
Run free
Students associate travel with freedom (e.g., a break in academic and work expectations), a boost to emotional health and relaxation, and an opportunity to experience nature (CPSU study).
Step it up
Students who have taken a gap year perform better academically and report greater job satisfaction than do those who havenât, research suggests. Gap year experiences can reignite a passion for learning and influence personal goals and values, including career paths, say Karl Haigler and Rae Nelson in The Gap-Year Advantage (Macmillan, 2005).
Stay healthy
Physically active leisure helps us maintain physical and mental health, especially during times of stress, according to a study of 20,000 people in the Canadian Journal of Public Health (2001).
Get creative
Knowing people from other cultures makes us more creative in tasks that draw on multicultural influences and more receptive to new ideas from outside our own experience, suggests a study from Harvard Business School (2011).
Love your life
Even the anticipation of vacation travel makes us feel good about our lives and health, according to a 2002 study in the Journal of Vacation Marketing.
âClimbing sand dunes in the desert of Al Ain (United Arab Emirates) made me push myself to the limits. I climbed until I literally couldnât go further, and then I sat down and let the wind whip around me. I felt strong and at peace.â
âJamie Teal, graduate student, Arkansas Tech University
Follow us on Instagram, and donât forget to use the hashtag #SH101Travel
Meghan Horne, travel marketing coordinator, AAA Northeast, Providence, Rhode Island.
Charlotte Nichols, director of business development and travel marketing, AAA Northeast, Providence, Rhode Island.
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