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You’re Planning Trips Wrong and It’s Costing You

Most people plan trips the same way. They pick a destination first, lock in dates, and only then start thinking about what they actually want to do. It feels logical. It’s also why so many people end up overpaying and coming back from trips that feel underwhelming. If you’ve ever built a trip like this, you’ve probably experienced the same pattern. You spend more than expected, rush through activities, and still feel like you missed something. Tools like Funizy exist to flip that process, but

By Martin Zokov

2 min read
You’re Planning Trips Wrong and It’s Costing You

Most people plan trips the same way. They pick a destination first, lock in dates, and only then start thinking about what they actually want to do.

It feels logical. It’s also why so many people end up overpaying and coming back from trips that feel underwhelming.

If you’ve ever built a trip like this, you’ve probably experienced the same pattern. You spend more than expected, rush through activities, and still feel like you missed something. Tools like Funizy exist to flip that process, but the real issue is deeper than the tool. It’s the order of decisions.

The Problem Starts With the First Step

Choosing the destination first locks everything too early.

Once you decide where to go, you immediately limit your options. Prices are no longer flexible. Availability becomes a constraint. You are no longer exploring possibilities, you are reacting to them.

Flights, hotels, and even activities start shaping your decisions instead of the other way around. That is where the extra cost begins.

Why You End Up Overpaying

When you plan this way, you remove your biggest advantage as a traveler. Flexibility.

You search for flights on fixed dates. You look for hotels in a specific area. You try to fit activities into whatever time is left.

Every step pushes you into a narrower corner, and narrower options are almost always more expensive.

At the same time, you are not optimizing for experience. You are optimizing for logistics.

That tradeoff is rarely worth it.

The Better Way to Think About It

The best trips usually start with something specific.

A concert you want to attend. A festival that only happens once a year. A food scene you genuinely care about. A place that matches a very specific interest.

The destination comes after.

This single change keeps your options open longer. You can adjust dates. You can choose where to stay based on price and convenience. You can build the trip around something that actually matters to you.

The Difference You Notice

A destination first trip often feels like a checklist.

You move from one attraction to another, trying to maximize what you see. It looks efficient, but it rarely feels memorable.

An interest first trip feels different.

You know why you are there. The days have a natural structure. The trip has a center, and everything else fits around it.

That is why some trips stay with you and others blur together.

What This Really Costs You

It is not just money.

Yes, you often pay more for flights and accommodation. That part is easy to measure.

The bigger cost is the experience itself.

You spend time in places that do not matter to you. You rush through moments that should feel relaxed. You come back with photos, but not with memories that stand out.

All because the first decision was made in the wrong order.

A Simple Fix

Instead of asking where should I go, start with what you actually want to experience.

Then build everything else around it.

This one change fixes most of the problems people have with travel. It reduces unnecessary costs, simplifies decisions, and leads to trips that actually feel worth taking.

And once you see the difference, it is very hard to go back to planning the old way.