Monday, May 28, 2012

Money & Business

To Drive or Fly? Top Tools for Choosing

By Marianne Lavelle
Posted 6/10/07

Ah, the lure of the one-hour flight. When you're facing the prospect of summer traffic and high gasoline prices, air travel starts to look pretty good. Then you study the details. Add in the travel time to sometimes congested and distant airports, and that extra hour or two for security and check-in on each end. Plus, even the cheapest airfares start to mount up when the whole family is traveling together, and then there's the fact you may need some wheels when you get to your destination anyway. It's no wonder so many people choose to drive, despite record gas prices.

When deciding whether to fly on those short-enough-to-drive trips, make sure to keep in mind that all-important number-your car's miles-per-gallon rating. For example, the cost of gasoline for round-trip travel from St. Louis to Chicago in a Ford Explorer would be nearly $95, but it would be nearly 60 percent cheaper at about $40 if you could fit the whole family into a Toyota Prius. An excellent Web tool is AAA's fuel cost calculator (www.fuelcostcalculator.com). It's updated regularly with current gas prices and allows you to input the make and model of your vehicle, plus your travel plans.

But travelers make the drive-or-fly choice based not only on price but on how much highway aggravation they are willing to bear. "It depends on your ability to stay alert and be patient," says Mike Pina, spokesman for AAA.

Here are some examples of popular destinations and fly-or-drive factors to consider. Each of these flights is slightly more than one hour one way, and all of the round-trip airfares per person (excluding tax and fees) were the lowest available at Orbitz one day recently. The round-trip fuel cost is based on the nation's bestselling vehicle, the Toyota Camry, which has an above-average fuel efficiency of 31 mpg on the highway. The driving times calculated at www.mapquest.com assume that there is no overwhelming traffic backup; you should assume that there will be.

Los Angeles to Las Vegas

Airfare: $88

Distance: 270 miles

Driving time: 4 hours, 1 minute

Fuel cost: $58

Hassle factor: The choke points on Interstate 15 exiting Los Angeles easily add two hours to this drive. Since the airfare is cheap and the West has the highest gas prices in the country, it may be worth it to fly.

Washington, D.C., to Boston

Airfare: $118

Distance: 443 miles

Driving time: 7 hours, 49 minutes

Fuel cost: $91

Hassle factor: When you add nearly $50 in tolls on Interstate 95, the cost of a flight (for one person) is actually cheaper. Also consider the time and cost of the overnight stop you'll need after fighting New Jersey traffic.

Miami to Orlando

Airfare: $158

Distance: 234 miles

Driving time: 3 hours, 34 minutes

Fuel cost: $47

Hassle factor: The drive is cheaper, but with bugs on the windshield and tourists meandering on the roads outside the Magic Kingdom, Cinderella definitely would have traveled coach to get to her central Florida castle.

Denver to Telluride, Colo.

Airfare: $358

Distance: 331 miles

Driving time: 6 hours, 10 minutes

Fuel cost: $70

Hassle factor: Flying is pricey since one carrier, Great Lakes Airlines, holds a monopoly on this route. However, be prepared to brave heavy rains or mudslides on winding mountain roads if you drive.

This story appears in the June 18, 2007 print edition of U.S. News & World Report.

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