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  4. A Michigan family of 4 took a $6,000 vacation to an all-inclusive resort in Mexico and only spent $300 on the whole trip - here's how they were able to do it

A Michigan family of 4 took a $6,000 vacation to an all-inclusive resort in Mexico and only spent $300 on the whole trip - here's how they were able to do it

When it comes to personal finances, Andy and Nicole are no strangers to number crunching.

A Michigan family of 4 took a $6,000 vacation to an all-inclusive resort in Mexico and only spent $300 on the whole trip  - here's how they were able to do it

After successfully paying off their nearly $200,000 mortgage in less than four years, the couple decided to go on their first family vacation.

After successfully paying off their nearly $200,000 mortgage in less than four years, the couple decided to go on their first family vacation.

The couple and their two children went to an all-inclusive resort in San José del Cabo, Mexico, for five nights and six days.

"The kids played all day with us in the family-friendly pool and met new friends in the kid's club. Nicole and I enjoyed exercising in the fitness center in the mornings, laying out in the pool cabanas during the day and eating at a different on-campus restaurant each night. We didn't even care if the kids ate all of their food because it was all-inclusive," Andy wrote in a blog post.

The family stayed at the Paradisus Los Cabos, where rates start at $314 per night. If they'd taken a less savings-oriented approach to the trip, their five-night stay alone could have cost around $1,570. But instead, the entire trip cost them just $329.

The family stayed at the Paradisus Los Cabos, where rates start at $314 per night. If they

The expenses, Andy told Business Insider, were divided three ways:

  • $125 for tips
  • $95 to pay an annual credit card fee
  • $109 for food during travel days

The solution? "We found this magical world of travel rewards," Andy told Business Insider.

The solution? "We found this magical world of travel rewards," Andy told Business Insider.

The couple's rewards points covered air travel, five nights at the resort, a couple's spa treatment, private transportation, airport parking, and a few smaller items like sunscreen.

The $6,000 travel credit was tax-free, Andy explained in his blog.

"That would have required me to earn around $8,000 at my job to pay for this trip," he wrote.

So, how exactly did they do it? To cover the real expenses of the trip, the couple spent 10 months piling up travel credit — around $6,000 worth of it.

So, how exactly did they do it? To cover the real expenses of the trip, the couple spent 10 months piling up travel credit — around $6,000 worth of it.

Andy stressed that entering the world of credit cards can be dangerous.

Pulling off a $300 luxury vacation requires routinely tracking spending, making payments on time, and picking cards that offer the best bonuses.

He and Nicole signed up for credit cards with big travel bonuses — miles, points, and cashback. They put their typical monthly expenses on credit cards, hit the minimum spending requirements needed to receive the bonuses, and then repeated the process.

He and Nicole signed up for credit cards with big travel bonuses — miles, points, and cashback. They put their typical monthly expenses on credit cards, hit the minimum spending requirements needed to receive the bonuses, and then repeated the process.

The couple used five different credit cards to collect points:

  • The Gold Delta SkyMiles card
  • The Chase Sapphire Preferred card
  • The Chase Ink Business card
  • The Barclaycard Arrival Plus card
  • The Capital One Venture card

Working toward a nearly free vacation by earning points is no easy task. In his blog, Andy lays out a few tips he's learned along the journey.

Working toward a nearly free vacation by earning points is no easy task. In his blog, Andy lays out a few tips he

Andy suggests signing up for automatic payments and paying off credit card bills in full each month.

He also suggests mapping out a schedule when applying for new credit cards.

"One major lesson learned was that as we were drawing closer to hitting our MSR [minimum spending requirement] is that we should have applied for our next card immediately. Sometimes the process of applying and receiving our next card would take a few weeks. This was precious points earning time that we were missing out on," he wrote.


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