"If you book through a travel agency, you're asking for trouble," said Brian Kelly, founder of The Points Guy blog. "Go direct. The more people you put in the way, the more complicated things get."
Here are some of the most useful tech tools that travel experts and I are using at this "new normal" stage of the pandemic to make our excursions more pleasant, including apps to monitor flight changes and find the best seats.
Travel Hacks for Smoother, Cheaper Flights
In an era of sky-high inflation when everyone is trying to save a buck, it is still possible to score a good deal on a plane ticket without booking through a third-party agency. The key is to use services that track each airline's ticket costs and set up alerts for price drops.
Kelly's tool of choice for scoring cheap airfares is Google Flights. With this web tool, he plugs in travel dates and destinations and then toggles on the option to track prices and receive email updates as soon as the airfare plummets. Then he buys the tickets directly through the airline.
The next step is to maximise comfort on the plane by getting the best cheap seats. For that, there's SeatGuru, a web tool that lets travellers plug in their flight number to review an aircraft's detailed seating chart. It highlights information about the seats, including those with extra legroom, and those with limited recline or overhead storage, which is more detail than the basic diagram that airlines show.
After booking, the last step is to monitor the status of the flight — a crucial step because cancellations and delays have become so common. Web tools such as FlightAware and Flightradar24 give up-to-date information on an aircraft's precise location and insights into an airline's track record for on-time arrivals and delays.
A bonus tip: Lounges can get very crowded nowadays, so when Kelly arrives at the airport, he uses the app LoungeBuddy to look up the ones he can slip into easily.
Tech to Stay Organised
In the early stages of the pandemic, travellers had to peruse travel and tourism websites to learn about the thicket of coronavirus restrictions and requirements for their destination. Now there's a shortcut.
Henry Harteveldt, the founder of Atmosphere Research Group, a travel analysis firm in San Francisco, uses JoinSherpa.com, a web tool that pulls up the travel requirements for departures and returns. If you're flying to Chile from San Francisco, for example, the site loads a list of all the health documents and quarantine requirements to enter the country, as well as the documents needed to get back into the United States.
Juggling travel documents and itineraries can still be a hassle because we have to carry more information than we used to. I use several tools to keep my itinerary and health documents tidy.
My favourite for organising itineraries is TripIt. It can scan your inbox for itineraries, hotel bookings and car rental reservations, and then compile that information into an all-in-one itinerary presented as a neat timeline.
Here's how TripIt fits into my planning. I have a separate email account just for trip itineraries. After booking a flight, a car rental or a hotel, I forward the confirmation emails to that email account. Then TripIt automatically scans that inbox and updates my timelines.
For health documents, I always carry two digital forms of my vaccine records just in case there's confusion. The first is the digital QR code provided by California's Department of Public Health, which I store in my phone's wallet app. The other is a photograph of the physical vaccine card, which I save inside a notes app to make it easy to find later.
Keeping Track of Luggage
Airport staffing shortages and surging demand for air travel have driven a spike in incidents of lost luggage. That makes wireless trackers such as Tile and Apple's AirTag especially useful. These are miniature beacons that can be slipped into a piece of luggage and, in the event that a bag or suitcase is lost, the Tile or Find My app on a smartphone can be opened to pull up the tracker's approximate location on a map.
Even if your luggage isn't lost, a tracker can offer peace of mind. Kelly said that when he recently travelled through Europe, his AirTag told him precisely where his bag was when he arrived in Paris.
Yes to Hotel Apps
To manage hotel reservations, just make sure to download the hotel's app, if it has one. That's especially important now because many large brands let you check in via the app, and the sooner you do, the sooner your room will be ready.
Don't skip this step. If you forget to check in and you show up many hours late because of a flight delay, the hotel may give away your reservation, Kelly said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.