Are you currently in need of both a bulk stash of pretzels and a travel agent to arrange your next vacation?
By Claire Lampen, Women's Health
Look no further than Costco, your one-stop shop for massive quantities of foodstuffs and also, apparently, booking travel.
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Look no further than Costco, your one-stop shop for massive quantities of foodstuffs and also, apparently, booking travel.
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Costco Travel isn't new, but it is a fun feature for the post-holiday lull when the festive lights go back in storage, temperatures drop, and we find ourselves facing both massive holiday bills and many cold, dark months without a single notable holiday to look forward to. Want to book a tropical getaway for dreary March, a month universally acknowledged to be the pits, but require a steep, steep discount because you spent all your money on wool sweaters for friends and family? Consider Costco.
The service offers an array of alluring vacation packages that seem not only fiscally responsible, but also entertaining. You can book either over the phone or online, whether you need rental cars, plane tickets, hotel accommodations, a cruise, or other kind of vacation package. It's basically a Costco-branded Expedia or Kayak: You visit the website and enter your trip preferences—dates, number of guests, destination—and Costco furnishes the best available deals, keeping you abreast of your trip's pricing throughout every step of the process. (FYI: Costco Travel services and deals are only available to Costco members who live in the United States.)
[post_ads]Not bothered by being trapped at sea with hundreds of strangers for a week? There's this seven-night Disney Wonder cruise to Alaska, which takes intrepid travelers to Tracy Arm Fjord, Juneau, Skagway, Ketchikan, and Hubbard Glacier—and awards them a free Costco cash card—for under $2,000 per person.
Thought the whole point of this venture was to escape the cold? Maybe you would prefer a visit to Oahu with this Hilton Hawaiian Village Waikiki Beach Resort package: $800 per person buys you five nights on a Hawaiian beach with a family-friendly vibe. Or perhaps this more affordable, all-inclusive Omni Cancun package is for you: for $489 per person, you get four nights' worth of unlimited food and drink (yes, alcoholic drink), access to a pool with a swim-up bar, and the chance to marinate in a "mega-jacuzzi."
See more at: Women's Health
The service offers an array of alluring vacation packages that seem not only fiscally responsible, but also entertaining. You can book either over the phone or online, whether you need rental cars, plane tickets, hotel accommodations, a cruise, or other kind of vacation package. It's basically a Costco-branded Expedia or Kayak: You visit the website and enter your trip preferences—dates, number of guests, destination—and Costco furnishes the best available deals, keeping you abreast of your trip's pricing throughout every step of the process. (FYI: Costco Travel services and deals are only available to Costco members who live in the United States.)
[post_ads]Not bothered by being trapped at sea with hundreds of strangers for a week? There's this seven-night Disney Wonder cruise to Alaska, which takes intrepid travelers to Tracy Arm Fjord, Juneau, Skagway, Ketchikan, and Hubbard Glacier—and awards them a free Costco cash card—for under $2,000 per person.
Thought the whole point of this venture was to escape the cold? Maybe you would prefer a visit to Oahu with this Hilton Hawaiian Village Waikiki Beach Resort package: $800 per person buys you five nights on a Hawaiian beach with a family-friendly vibe. Or perhaps this more affordable, all-inclusive Omni Cancun package is for you: for $489 per person, you get four nights' worth of unlimited food and drink (yes, alcoholic drink), access to a pool with a swim-up bar, and the chance to marinate in a "mega-jacuzzi."
See more at: Women's Health