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Laura Beck

I Spent Almost $3K on This Vacation — Here’s What ChatGPT Could’ve Saved Me

Rebecca Todd / Getty Images/iStockphoto

After getting back from a week in New Orleans, I realized I’d dropped nearly $3,000 on the trip. It was worth it, but something felt off about the total. I asked ChatGPT to break down my spending and show me where I overpaid.

Find Out: 5 Ways To Travel Like a Millionaire Without Spending Like One

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The artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot didn’t hold back. Turns out I could have saved about $700 on the trip without changing a single memorable experience.

Also see 15 secrets from travel insiders that will save you a lot of money.

What I Actually Spent

My week in New Orleans broke down like this: $650 for a flight from the Los Angeles International Airport, $1,285 for an Airbnb for seven nights, and roughly $800 on food and entertainment.

The total damage was $2,735.

ChatGPT’s reaction was that this wasn’t outrageous for a week-long trip, but it was “avoidably high.”

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The Flight

ChatGPT immediately flagged my $650 flight as the first problem. Los Angeles to New Orleans is a competitive route that should cost between $350 and $450 if you book smart.

The AI guessed what probably went wrong, and it was right on every count. I booked too close to my departure date, flew on peak days over a weekend, didn’t price-check Southwest or JetBlue, and never set up fare alerts.

ChatGPT laid out exactly what I should do next time: book six to 10 weeks out, fly on Tuesday or Wednesday instead of Friday through Sunday, use Google Flights to track prices, and check Southwest separately.

Realistic savings: about $250 just on the flight.

The Airbnb

My Airbnb cost $1,285 for the week. ChatGPT said that’s high for New Orleans unless I stayed somewhere very central or premium.

The AI suggested I should have looked at neighborhoods like Mid-City or the Garden District with streetcar access, considered licensed guesthouses, or even checked boutique hotels.

Realistic savings: about $250 on lodging, and probably a better experience too.

Food and Entertainment

This was the category where ChatGPT went easier on me. I spent about $800 on meals, drinks and activities, and the AI said this was actually the least wasteful part of my trip. The splurges I chose were solid: the National WWII Museum, Preservation Hall and a food crawl.

But eating out for every single meal added up fast, and drinks in the French Quarter are sneakily expensive. ChatGPT suggested ways to trim the budget without losing the fun, including going to happy hours instead of paying dinner prices and checking out free live music.

Realistic savings: $150 to $200 without skipping anything iconic.

The Optimized Version

ChatGPT rebuilt my entire trip with smarter choices. The flight drops from $650 to around $400. Lodging goes from $1,285 to about $1,000. Food and entertainment shrink from $800 to roughly $625.

The new total: approximately $2,025.

That’s a bit more than $700 in savings for the exact same vacation. I’m not going to lie — seeing that number hurt a little.

The Lesson I Learned

ChatGPT’s conclusion was both comforting and annoying. I didn’t travel badly. I traveled uninformed. The biggest takeaway wasn’t about New Orleans specifically. It was that vacation overspending usually happens in predictable categories that are easy to fix once you know what to look for.

Next time I plan a trip, I’m running the itinerary past ChatGPT before I book anything. And then I’m double checking everything because, as we know, AI can hallucinate. But, if the AI can save me $700 on one week in New Orleans, imagine what it could do for a longer or more expensive vacation.

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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: I Spent Almost $3K on This Vacation — Here’s What ChatGPT Could’ve Saved Me

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