Europe Trips Go on Sale as Currency Plunges

So what’s a good deal in Europe? If you just want to enjoy raw culture and European flair, Vienna is probably your best bet and it’s cheap as well.
Europe Trips Go on Sale as Currency Plunges
In this picture taken Sunday, Nov. 16, 2014 visitors crowed the Christmas market in front of the neo-Gothic City hall in Vienna, Austria. Nothing will put you more in the mood for the festive season than the Christmas markets big and small dotting the city. Choices range from the more than 150 wooden huts set up in front of the City hall, to markets often no bigger than a few booths. Among the hundreds of goods on offer are tree lights, candles, ornaments and musical Christmas toys. Letters read "Merry Christmas". (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)
Valentin Schmid
1/27/2015
Updated:
1/27/2015

Europe’s cheaper currency might not achieve more lending and more investment after all. It will, however, make a trip across the Atlantic a lot cheaper for Americans.

Back in 2008 it cost Americans $1.60 to buy one euro. Now it’s only $1.13, down 30 percent to levels not seen since 2003. You are still getting a 19 percent discount since the euro’s recent high of April 2014. So Europe is on sale, what else is good news?


source: tradingeconomics.com

When to Go?

 There are several reasons why you should go to Europe in the summer and lock in most of your costs at the cheap exchange rate now.

Unless you are an avid skier and prefer the Austrian Alps over the Rockies, the weather is the best everywhere from Sweden to Italy starting in late May. Also flights—the only purchase that prices in dollars—are cheaper when booked in advance.

A non-stop flight from New York to Rome with Alitalia in June costs $1,254 according to Expedia.com, but you would have to pay $1,385 when going in March.

If you book early, you can also lock in your hotel costs at the current cheap exchange rate. The only risk you run is that the euro strengthens until you go in June and you'll have to pay more when you are on the ground.

Paris or Not

If you are looking for a real bargain, then the first rule is to not go to Paris. Flights are relatively cheap but everything from hotels to restaurants are amongst the most expensive in the Eurozone.

Nonetheless, if you are really keen, you can grab a non-stop flight in June for around $1,200 and get four-star hotels like the Pullman Paris Tour Eiffel for 265 euros per night for two people, according to HRS.com. That’s $150 per person per night.

If you were to go eat out twice a day during your trip, used public transportation most of the time, and didn’t go overboard on the beers, you would spend 516 euros for a typical tourist week in Paris, excluding entry to sights (expensive). That’s $580 at the current rate, but this might fluctuate until you go in the summer.

Tourists walks in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)
Tourists walks in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

Fortunately, we are excluding Switzerland and Norway in this article because they don’t use the euro.

Everything there is more expensive and the exchange isn’t particularly good either. Proof? The same basket of goods would cost you 905 euros in Zurich, almost double the Paris rate.

Best Value

So what’s a good deal in Europe? If you just want to enjoy raw culture and European flair, Vienna is probably your best bet and it’s cheap as well.

Four star hotels like the Mailberger Hof in the first district are only $100 per night in a double-room. The general tourist program of eating and drinking and excluding sights (cheaper here) is only $388. You have to pay slightly more for a non-stop flight ($1,420), but save more on the hotel and the rest.

If you don’t mind the wait, you could get a flight with one stop for as little as $1,100 but that goes for Paris as well.

Best Rate

A final tip for making sure you are actually getting a good exchange rate. First off, here is the bad news: Whatever you do, banks will never give you the official rate (now around $1.13). But there are a few things you can do to make sure you are getting the best rate.

Usually credit card companies charge a fee for using the card in a foreign currency. Make sure you check the fee of your card in advance. Fees in the range of 1-2 percent are reasonable. However, after charging the fee, credit cards usually give you the best exchange rate compared to everything else.

You will definitely get a worse rate at an ATM abroad and might even have to pay a hefty service fee. Check your terms of service and look for special pre-paid cards designed for trips abroad.

The rate when exchanging cash for cash is usually the worst you get and varies between each currency exchange. However, you mostly save the exchange fee, so do some research here as to where the best places are for exchanging cash, in the Unites States and abroad.

Valentin Schmid is a former business editor for the Epoch Times. His areas of expertise include global macroeconomic trends and financial markets, China, and Bitcoin. Before joining the paper in 2012, he worked as a portfolio manager for BNP Paribas in Amsterdam, London, Paris, and Hong Kong.
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