12:06 PM There - s a Specific Time and Day to Get the Best Airfare Deals - and the Reasoning Why Is Fascinating | ||||
#cheap airline deals # 4.2KTracking trends for weeks — even months — before committing to buying a plane ticket is just plain unproductive. If you knew the secret about the best times to buy, you wouldn’t need to put yourself through the mental agony of clicking the “purchase” button and wondering “What if prices drop tomorrow?” Photo credit: Shutterstock Peter Greenberg, CBS’ travel editor, released his tips for LinkedIn’s series on productivity hacks, explaining how he spends only “minutes” on buying airfare. Part of this is because he understands what a reasonable price is and what’s not for a ticket, but he also knows “WHEN to book.” Greenberg has a very specific time and day on which to buy tickets: “Wednesday at 1 a.m. just one hour after Tuesday midnight,” in the timezone where the airline’s booking center is based. Why? “Most low airfares seem to appear between Sunday night and Monday night. And then, when people book those fares, they have 24 hours in which to purchase them,” he wrote. “At midnight Tuesday, all the discount fares that weren’t purchased come flooding back into the airline’s computer systems. And that’s when you strike.” You might be thinking, “this sounds like I can’t book online.” That’s right, you can’t. Greenberg wrote that this must be done over the phone. The perk of booking over the phone though, Greenberg noted, is that it’s easier to get the good coach seats without them costing a little extra. Watch Greenberg talk about his tips about the best time to book: If you can’t bring yourself to get on the phone with an actual person, which Greenberg acknowledged might be hard for some people these days, he does have a tip for online shoppers as well. “Whenever possible, I shop for fares on one computer and then clear my cookies or book on another computer altogether. If you want to take it a step further, go to a different location,” he wrote, citing “growing anecdotal evidence” that airlines are tracking various metrics on your computer that could drive up a price. Here are a few of Greenberg’s other tips:
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