How to Find the Cheapest Summer Flights in 15 Minutes
Five minutes on Google Explore saved our anniversary trip $520.
Last month, my wife and I almost paid $774 to fly to Nashville for our 10-year anniversary.
We used AMEX Travel and found their best price. I’d been booking through them for years and never questioned it.
Then I spent five minutes on Google Explore—using it the right way—and booked flight for the same trip for $254. Same seats. Same travel window. $520 less.
That money upgraded our hotel room.
The difference wasn’t luck or credit card hacks. It was one specific method most people never find.
Here’s how it works.
1. Start Here. Leave This Blank.
Go to Google Travel and open the Explore feature.
Most people type in a destination. That’s the mistake.
When you enter a city, you’re asking Google “how much does it cost to go here?”—and Google gives you an honest but incomplete answer. You see one destination’s prices. You miss every cheaper option that existed two clicks away.
Leave the destination field blank. Enter only your departure city.
Now Google shows you every possible destination, ranked by price. Instead of pricing one trip, you’re seeing the entire opportunity map.
2. Flexibility First, Filters Second
The next move is date flexibility. Select “1-week trip in next 6 months” or choose your target month. June, July, whatever works for your family.
Here’s why this matters more than most people realize: rigid dates are the second-most-expensive habit in travel. When you add this filter, Google stops showing you the cheapest flights and starts showing you the cheapest weeks to fly. That shift alone can save hundreds.
Once you have your window, add filters one at a time:
Popular destinations
Direct flights only
Specific airlines
Bags included
Start with no filters. Add one, watch the price move, and decide if it’s worth it. A direct flight adding $80? Now that’s a deliberate choice instead of an invisible assumption.
This is how you master the method—not just the tool.
3. Switch to the Map View
This is where the deals become visible.
Switch to map view. Instead of a list of prices, you get a visual of destinations with price bubbles—and you can see, at a glance, where your money goes furthest.
Our Nashville trip was this moment. Newark departure. May 3–12. Two travelers. Direct flights both ways. The map showed $254 total.
AMEX Travel’s best price for those same seats?
$774.
Three times the cost. Not because the flights were different, but because fixed dates on a rigid platform hide the windows where prices drop. The map view doesn’t just show you a price. It shows you optionality.
And optionality is where the savings live.
4. Get On This Now
Summer prices spike in April and May as demand builds. We’re still inside the booking window where the deals sit—but it closes fast.
This isn’t urgency for the sake of it. It’s math.
The closer you get to summer, the less leverage you have. Use this method while the price curve is still in your favor. It takes 15 minutes. The tool is free.
And don’t think of this as cutting corners on a vacation. The $520 I saved on flights didn’t disappear—it paid for a better hotel room. Same trip, better experience, because I searched differently.
That’s the version of money management worth building. Not spending less on the things that matter. Spending smarter to get more out of them.
The System at a Glance
Go to Google Travel → Explore
Leave the destination blank—enter departure city only
Add “1-week trip in next 6 months” or select your target month
Start with zero filters, then add one at a time
Switch to map view to see where the deals are
That’s it.
Ten years from now, I won’t remember what I paid for those Nashville flights.
But I’ll remember the room upgrade. The extra dinner we didn’t have to think twice about. The anniversary that felt exactly like what it was supposed to feel like.
The $520 made more of that possible. Not because I’m disciplined. Because I used a free tool the right way for five minutes.
That’s what strategic spending actually looks like. Not cutting what matters. Just staying intentional about the moves that add up.
Thanks for reading. See you next week.
— Ryan
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Looking for tips when flying overseas! Great post and thanks!