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How to Save Money on Flights as Airlines Raise Prices

April 28, 2026 12:00 AM
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Table of Contents

  • Why Flights Cost So Much More in 2026
  • The Scale of the Increase: What the Data Actually Shows
  • Strategy 1: Master the Booking Window
  • Strategy 2: Use Flexibility as a Superpower
  • Strategy 3: The Incognito Search and VPN Trick
  • Strategy 4: Set Price Alerts — and Act Fast
  • Strategy 5: Use Points and Miles When Cash Prices Spike
  • Strategy 6: Beat the Bag Fee Surge
  • Strategy 7: Search Smarter with the Right Tools
  • Strategy 8: Consider Alternatives to Direct Routes
  • The 24-Hour Cancellation Rule: Your Risk-Free Safety Net
  • Where Deals Still Exist in 2026
  • Conclusion: The Algorithms Are Beatable
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • External References

Why Flights Cost So Much More in 2026

If you have tried to book a flight in the past few months and felt a jolt of sticker shock, you are not imagining it. Airfare has surged in 2026, and the reasons are specific, well-documented, and unlikely to reverse quickly. The US-Iran conflict that began on 28 February 2026 sent oil prices from approximately $70 per barrel before the conflict to above $100 by late March. Jet fuel spot prices rose from $2.42 per gallon at the end of February to nearly $4.69 per gallon in April — a 94 percent increase in six weeks.

Airlines operate on notoriously thin profit margins. When operating costs increase this sharply and rapidly, they respond in two ways: raising fares and cutting capacity. United Airlines announced plans to cut roughly 5 percent of its flight capacity in the second and third quarters of 2026, targeting off-peak, midweek, and red-eye routes. Air France-KLM announced price increases for long-haul flights. Cathay Pacific more than doubled fuel surcharges on specific routes. Delta, United, Southwest, and JetBlue all hiked checked bag fees by 20 percent or more in the same week.

Fewer seats plus higher operating costs equals higher prices. The question is not whether airfare has gone up — it clearly has. The question is whether smart travellers can still find meaningful savings in this environment. The answer, drawn from the most current guidance from travel experts at CNBC, The Points Guy, Google Flights, and Skyscanner in April 2026, is yes — if you know which strategies to apply.

The Scale of the Increase: What the Data Actually Shows

Measure Pre-Conflict (Feb 23, 2026) Post-Conflict (Mar–Apr 2026) Change Source
Average round-trip international economy fare $774 $998 + $224 (+29%) Kayak data, via CNBC
Average domestic round-trip economy fare $336 $350 + $14 (+4%) Kayak data, via CNBC
Flights to London (UK) vs. year ago Baseline 30%+ higher + 30%+ Kayak data, via TPG
Flights to Amsterdam, Dublin, Paris vs. year ago Baseline 20%+ higher + 20%+ Kayak data, via TPG
Summer 2026 domestic fares vs. summer 2025 Baseline Higher across board Ongoing Points Path data, TPG
August vs. July domestic fares (summer 2026) July (baseline) August ~14% cheaper August wins Points Path data, TPG
Jet fuel spot price $2.42/gallon (end of Feb) $4.69/gallon (Apr 2026) + 94% Yahoo Finance/CNBC
Delta, United, SW first checked bag fee ~$35-$40 one-way $45 one-way + 20%+ TPG, April 2026

The differential between international and domestic fare increases is significant for travel planning. International routes have absorbed much more of the jet fuel cost spike, particularly for transatlantic travel, while domestic fares have risen more modestly. The practical implication: if budget is tight, domestic alternatives to international travel currently represent better value. And within international travel, routes where airlines have added significant capacity in recent years — Portugal, for instance, where Kayak data shows fares down slightly year-over-year — remain outliers offering relative savings.

Strategy 1: Master the Booking Window

The single most documented way to find cheaper flights is booking at the right time. The optimal window varies by route type and has shifted slightly in the current high-price environment.

Domestic Flights

Google Flights data in April 2026 identifies the sweet spot for the lowest domestic fares as 23 to 51 days before departure. Within that window, the savings versus booking too early (90+ days out) or too late (fewer than 7 days) are consistent and meaningful. Dollar Flight Club’s CEO Jesse Neugarten cited 28 days in advance as the specific point where savings peak for domestic flights, with potential savings of up to 24 percent versus other booking windows.

International Flights

International fares follow a different curve. Google Flights identifies the lowest prices generally 49 days or more before departure, but the current fuel price shock has compressed this window somewhat. Yahoo Finance’s April 2026 travel analysis noted that “when fuel prices spike, that timeline can shift quickly”, meaning prices for upcoming summer travel are climbing sooner than usual. For summer 2026, waiting for the historically optimal window may mean paying significantly more than booking now. Dollar Flight Club cites 60 days as the optimal advance booking window for international flights (10 percent average savings).

The 2026 caveat: Travel experts consistently advise that in a high-volatility price environment, the old ‘wait and see’ strategy is riskier than usual. CNBC travel expert Sally French (Nastro) said explicitly: ‘The only predictable thing you can do is lock in that affordable flight today. Many people think it will get cheaper, but that’s not guaranteed in the current environment.’ When you see a price that works for your budget, book it.

Strategy 2: Use Flexibility as a Superpower

Flexibility in travel dates, destinations, and airports is the cheapest and most consistently effective tool available to any air traveller. It does not require any special skills, subscriptions, or knowledge of complex booking systems. It requires only a willingness to let the best price determine the specifics of your trip rather than the other way around.

Day of the Week

Tuesdays and Wednesdays consistently show the lowest fares in 2026 according to Points Path data and travel experts cited by CNBC. Sundays are typically the most expensive. A family flying on Tuesday and returning on Wednesday instead of departing Friday and returning Sunday can save a meaningful percentage of the total fare — often 10 to 20 percent on the same route.

Time of Year

For summer 2026, August is approximately 14 percent cheaper than July for domestic flights and about 13 percent cheaper than June for international fares, according to Points Path data. Shoulder seasons — late May to early June and late August to mid-September — offer the combination of reasonable weather and lower prices that makes them the most cost-efficient travel periods. If a July trip is not essential, shifting even one or two weeks into early August can generate substantial savings.

Alternative Airports

Searching alternate departure or arrival airports frequently surfaces lower fares. In the Washington DC area, Baltimore-Washington (BWI) regularly shows materially lower fares than Dulles (IAD) or Reagan (DCA). London passengers often find lower fares from Stansted or Luton than Heathrow. New York travellers should compare JFK, Newark, and LaGuardia. The Points Guy recommends using Google Flights’ multi-airport search feature, which displays alternatives simultaneously.

Destination Flexibility

The most powerful flexibility is destination flexibility. Google Flights’ ‘Explore’ feature, Skyscanner’s ‘Everywhere’ destination search, and Hopper’s price maps all show the cheapest destinations from your departure airport for your travel dates. Travellers willing to let price lead their destination choice rather than the reverse are consistently finding fares 30 to 50 percent lower than fixed-destination searches.

Strategy 3: The Incognito Search and VPN Trick

Airlines and booking sites use cookies to track your searches. Multiple searches for the same route can signal demand to the pricing algorithm, sometimes triggering price increases on subsequent visits. The prevention is straightforward: always search for flights in your browser’s private or incognito mode (Ctrl+Shift+N in Chrome, Command+Shift+N on Mac).

An additional tactic used by experienced travellers is searching via a VPN with a server location set to a different country. Flight prices can vary based on where the booking is being made — a phenomenon known as geographic pricing. Some users report significant price differences when searching from different country locations for international routes, though this varies by airline and route. The additional effort is low and the potential saving, on a high-value international fare, can be meaningful. Gamintraveler’s 2025/2026 analysis specifically recommended this as one of the fifteen most effective cheap-flight strategies.

Strategy 4: Set Price Alerts — and Act Fast

Price alerts allow you to monitor a specific route and receive notifications when the price drops to your target or changes materially. In the current high-volatility pricing environment, these alerts are particularly valuable because airline fares are moving unusually rapidly — sometimes changing multiple times per day as jet fuel prices fluctuate.
  • Google Flights price alerts: Navigate to your route in Google Flights and toggle the price tracking switch. You will receive an email when the price changes significantly. Google Flights also shows whether a current fare is ‘typical,’ ‘high,’ or ‘low’ relative to historical data for that route.
  • Skyscanner price alerts: Set directly on the search results page. Skyscanner’s Savings Generator also identifies the best booking window for specific routes based on historical price data.
  • Hopper: Uses predictive analytics to tell you whether to ‘book now’ or ‘wait,’ with a price forecast and probability of the fare rising or falling. In a high-price environment, Hopper’s ‘buy now’ recommendations carry more weight than usual.
  • Dollar Flight Club and Going (formerly Scott’s Cheap Flights): Subscription services (from $30 to $49/year) that alert subscribers to deeply discounted fares and mistake fares — pricing errors by airlines that can offer 50 to 90 percent below normal fares. These deals are time-limited and require fast action, but when they appear they represent the largest single savings opportunity in flight booking.
The act-fast principle: Travel experts at CNBC, TPG, and Yahoo Finance all made the same point in April 2026: when prices are volatile and trending upward, the old habit of watching a fare for weeks before booking is the wrong strategy. Book it when you see a price that works. Most airlines allow free cancellation within 24 hours of booking under US DOT rules (for tickets departing from the US), giving you a risk-free window to check for better options after booking.

Strategy 5: Use Points and Miles When Cash Prices Spike

One of the most consistently underutilised strategies during a fare surge is checking the equivalent award price in points or miles. When cash fares rise sharply, the relative value of loyalty points improves in two ways simultaneously: the cash price of the ticket increases (making the award redemption worth more), while the points price of the award sometimes does not change at the same rate on programmes with fixed award charts.

Yahoo Finance’s April 2026 travel article made the case explicitly: “When airfare prices surge, redemption values sometimes improve — meaning the same number of points can suddenly cover a much more expensive ticket. In an unpredictable pricing environment, that kind of flexibility can make a meaningful difference.”

For UK travellers, Avios have become particularly valuable for European routes where the fuel spike has pushed cash prices highest. For US travellers, airline-specific miles (Delta SkyMiles, United MileagePlus, American AAdvantage) and transferable credit card currencies (American Express Membership Rewards, Chase Ultimate Rewards) all provide award booking options that may now represent considerably better value than they did before the fare surge. If you hold a travel credit card with a sign-up bonus or accumulated rewards balance, this is the moment those points are working hardest.

Additionally, if you have booked a flight on points that has now become significantly more expensive in cash, you effectively made a high-value redemption decision in advance. Award tickets booked with major US carriers can typically be cancelled and the points redeposited without fees, giving you flexibility to rebook if prices fall.

Strategy 6: Beat the Bag Fee Surge

The bag fee story in 2026 is significant and largely separate from the fare story. Delta, United, Southwest, and JetBlue all raised their first checked bag fee to $45 one-way in April 2026. A family of four taking a round-trip vacation with checked bags pays $360 in bag fees alone — on top of the fare.

Three strategies minimise this cost:
  • Carry-on only: The most effective bag fee strategy is not paying one. Packing in a carry-on for trips of a week or less requires some discipline but eliminates the fee entirely. Most budget-conscious travellers who adopt this habit find that they manage just as well as with checked luggage, with the added benefit of no wait at baggage claim.
  • Airline credit cards with free bag benefit: Most major US airline co-branded credit cards include a free first checked bag for the primary cardholder and typically one to five companions on the same booking. On Delta and United, this is worth $90 per person round-trip. For a family of four, the saving is $360 per trip — which alone can justify the annual fee on many airline cards. In the UK, the BA Amex and Barclaycard Avios cards include similar benefits.
  • Basic economy vs main cabin calculation: Basic economy fares are now often substantially lower than main cabin fares. But they typically do not include a carry-on bag larger than a personal item (on some carriers). The calculation of basic economy fare + possible bag fee versus main cabin fare is worth running explicitly for each booking rather than assuming one is always cheaper.

Strategy 7: Search Smarter with the Right Tools

Tool Best Use Key Feature Cost
Google Flights Primary search and price tracking Flexible dates calendar; Explore map; price tracking alerts; price history Free
Skyscanner Flexible destination and date search 'Everywhere' destination; monthly price calendar; price alerts Free
Hopper Price prediction for specific routes Buy now vs. wait recommendation; price forecast; watch feature Free (premium features paid)
Kayak Multi-site comparison; price forecast Hacker Fares (split ticketing); Price Forecast; flexible search Free
Google Flights Explore Destination flexibility Map showing cheapest destinations from your airport Free
Dollar Flight Club / Going Error fares and sale alerts Curated alerts for 50–90% discounted fares; manual research by deal experts $30–$49/year
Kiwi.com Complex multi-city itineraries Self-transfer connections across airlines not normally bookable together Free (booking fee)
Rome2Rio Multi-modal comparison Compare flight vs train vs bus vs drive costs and times for any route Free

TPG’s top tool recommendation (April 2026): Google Flights is the most useful starting point for any search. Use the Flexible Dates grid to see prices across different departure dates simultaneously, and the Explore map to compare destinations if you have flexibility on where to go. The price history feature shows whether the current fare is high, typical, or low for that route at this time of year.

Strategy 8: Consider Alternatives to Direct Routes

Nonstop flights are convenient but consistently among the most expensive options. Adding a planned layover can reduce fares meaningfully, and some airlines offer free or low-cost stopover programmes that make the layover an additional travel experience rather than a inconvenience.

The cheapest complex itinerary tool is Kiwi.com, which finds multi-city connections across airlines that do not partner with each other and are therefore not bookable as a single ticket through normal channels. A flight from London to Mexico City, for example, might be significantly cheaper as two separate tickets — London to New York on one carrier, New York to Mexico City on another — than as a single connecting itinerary. Kiwi self-transfers the risk of missed connections to the traveller, which requires some care with layover lengths, but for budget-conscious travellers the savings can be substantial.

Free stopover programmes are another underutilised option. Turkish Airlines offers free stopovers in Istanbul on qualifying routes. Qatar Airways offers free stopovers in Doha. Emirates offers stopovers in Dubai. Icelandair offers stopovers in Reykjavik on transatlantic routes at no additional airfare cost, turning a connection into a mini-destination. These are not applicable to every itinerary, but for travellers with flexibility they represent genuine added travel value for no additional cost.

The 24-Hour Cancellation Rule: Your Risk-Free Safety Net

One of the most practical tools available to any US-departing traveller is the 24-hour cancellation rule, mandated by the US Department of Transportation. Any airline operating a flight departing from the US — including international carriers — must offer free cancellation within 24 hours of booking, provided the ticket was purchased at least 7 days before departure.

Dollar Flight Club recommends using this rule strategically: when you spot a price that fits your budget, book it immediately and then spend the next 24 hours searching for anything better. If you find a cheaper fare, book the new ticket and cancel the original for a full refund, all within the 24-hour window. This lets you lock in a good price immediately (removing the risk of the price rising further) while maintaining the option to upgrade to an even better deal.

The same principle applies to award bookings. Most major US airlines allow free cancellation of award tickets with redeposit of miles, giving points-based bookings significant flexibility. This means booking an award ticket when a good redemption value appears is a genuinely low-risk decision, particularly in a high-fare environment where cash backup prices are elevated.

Where Deals Still Exist in 2026

Despite the overall fare surge, specific route and destination opportunities remain where prices are flat or even down year-over-year:
  • Portugal (Lisbon, Porto): Kayak data shows fares actually down slightly year-over-year as airlines have added significant seat capacity to Portugal in recent years. Supply has outpaced demand enough to offset fuel cost pressures.
  • August travel: Across both domestic and international routes, August 2026 fares are meaningfully cheaper than July (14 percent and 13 percent respectively, per Points Path). If summer travel is flexible, August offers the best value in the peak summer window.
  • Early-week departures: Tuesday and Wednesday departures continue to be meaningfully cheaper than Friday-to-Sunday travel on most routes.
  • Routes to emerging airline hubs: Destinations served by new or expanded routes from budget carriers tend to see price competition that offsets fuel cost increases. Gulf routes via Abu Dhabi, Doha, and Dubai continue to offer competitive pricing on many long-haul itineraries.
  • Domestic US travel: The gap between international and domestic fare increases in 2026 is significant. For travellers flexible on destination, a domestic US road trip or short-haul flight remains more cost-effective relative to pre-war prices than international alternatives.

Conclusion

Airline pricing in 2026 is driven by sophisticated revenue management algorithms designed to extract maximum yield from every seat. They are not, however, unbeatable. They are designed to profit from travellers who book without flexibility, without research, without awareness of booking windows, and without knowledge of the tools available to track and act on price movements.

The strategies in this article do not require special insider access or significant time investment. Setting a Google Flights price alert takes two minutes. Searching in incognito mode takes two additional seconds. Choosing a Tuesday departure instead of a Sunday costs nothing. Checking the points equivalent of a high-priced ticket takes five minutes. Knowing that August is 14 percent cheaper than July for the same domestic route is the kind of information that is freely available and consistently not used.

Fares are higher in April 2026 than they were in January, and the Iran war’s impact on jet fuel is unlikely to fully reverse in the near term. United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby warned in March that fares could increase 20 percent if jet fuel costs remained elevated. That environment makes the strategies above more valuable, not less. A 20 percent fare increase on a $1,000 ticket is $200. Booking on the right day in the right booking window using the right tool can save a comparable amount. The two effects are not equal: the fare increase is applied by an algorithm you cannot control, and the saving is created by knowledge you can acquire and act on right now.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are airline prices so high in 2026?

The primary cause is a sharp rise in jet fuel prices following the US-Iran conflict that began on 28 February 2026. Jet fuel spot prices rose from $2.42 per gallon at the end of February to nearly $4.69 per gallon by April — a 94 percent increase in six weeks. Airlines have responded by raising fares and cutting capacity on less profitable routes, particularly midweek and red-eye services. International fares have risen most sharply, with transatlantic fares to London up 30 percent year-over-year according to Kayak data.

What is the best time to book a flight in 2026?

For domestic US flights, Google Flights data identifies 23 to 51 days before departure as the optimal window, with Dollar Flight Club citing 28 days for maximum savings of up to 24 percent. For international flights, 49 days or more before departure is typically optimal, with 60 days cited by Dollar Flight Club for around 10 percent savings. However, in the current high-volatility environment caused by the Iran conflict, travel experts at CNBC advise locking in fares when you see a price that fits your budget rather than waiting, as prices are trending upward.

What are the cheapest days to fly in 2026?

Tuesdays and Wednesdays are consistently the cheapest days to fly for both domestic and international routes, according to Points Path data and travel experts cited by CNBC in April 2026. Sundays are typically the most expensive. For summer 2026 specifically, August is approximately 14 percent cheaper than July for domestic flights and about 13 percent cheaper for international flights, based on Points Path data of summer 2026 fares.

Does searching in incognito mode really help?

Yes, it can help. Airlines and booking sites use cookies to track repeated searches for the same route, which some algorithms use to display higher prices on subsequent visits. Searching in private/incognito mode prevents this cookie tracking. Additionally, using a VPN with a different country location can reveal different regional pricing on some international routes. The potential saving on a high-value international fare makes the minimal extra effort worthwhile.

How do I use Google Flights to find the cheapest fares?

Open Google Flights, enter your departure city, and use the Flexible Dates calendar view to see prices across different date combinations simultaneously. Use the Explore destination map feature if you have destination flexibility — it shows the cheapest destinations from your airport for your travel window. Set a price tracking alert for specific routes by toggling the track prices button on any route search. Google Flights also shows a ‘low’/‘typical’/‘high’ price assessment for any fare relative to historical data for that route.

Are points and miles worth using when airfare is expensive?

Yes, more than usual. When cash fares rise sharply, the relative value of loyalty points improves because the same number of points covers a more expensive ticket. Yahoo Finance’s April 2026 travel guidance specifically highlighted this: ‘when airfare prices surge, redemption values sometimes improve’. If you hold travel points from a credit card or airline loyalty programme, check the award price of your intended route — it may now represent significantly better value than before the fare surge.

How can I avoid the new $45 checked bag fees?

Three approaches: carry-on only (eliminates the fee entirely); an airline co-branded credit card that includes a free first checked bag (worth $90 per person round-trip on most US carriers); or booking a fare tier that includes a checked bag. On Delta, United, and Southwest, a travel credit card with free bag benefit saves $90 per person round-trip. For a family of four, that is $360 per trip — often more than the annual fee on an airline credit card.

What is a mistake fare and how do I find one?

A mistake fare is a pricing error by an airline or booking system that results in tickets being sold at dramatically below-normal prices — sometimes 50 to 90 percent below standard fares. They are typically corrected within hours. Services like Dollar Flight Club, Going (formerly Scott’s Cheap Flights), and Secret Flying alert subscribers to mistake fares as they appear. The DOT requires airlines to honour mistake fares purchased before the error is corrected in most cases. Speed is essential: these fares disappear quickly.

External References and Further Reading

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