Calculating Your TRUE Savings: The Hidden Costs to Consider

Here’s my honest take: the cheapest flight is often a psychological trick. That $79 fare looks irresistible—until you zoom out and calculate the full trip cost. (Airlines are very good at making us stop at the ticket price.)
Let’s break this down properly.
Ground Transportation Costs
If you’re considering nearby airport flight savings, start with a simple formula:
(Extra Miles ÷ Your Car’s MPG × Gas Price) + Tolls + Estimated Wear & Tear
Wear and tear means the long-term cost of maintenance from added mileage—oil changes, tire use, depreciation. The IRS mileage rate (67 cents per mile in 2024, IRS.gov) is often used as a benchmark for total vehicle cost.
Pro tip: Use that IRS rate if you want a quick, realistic estimate instead of guessing.
Parking Fees
This is where smaller airports sometimes shine. Major hubs can charge $20–$40 per day for long-term parking (airport websites confirm wide variations), while regional airports may charge half that—or less.
Five days at $30/day = $150.
Five days at $12/day = $60.
That difference alone can erase your “deal.”
The Value of Your Time
Now the uncomfortable question: what is your time worth?
If you save $50 but add four extra travel hours, you’re effectively “earning” $12.50 per hour. Would you take that rate? I wouldn’t. (Unless I really love road trips and gas station snacks.)
The Break-Even Point
Add everything:
• Extra gas and tolls
• Vehicle wear
• Parking difference
• Time value
If the savings are minimal—or negative—you have your answer. And before blaming airline pricing tricks, it’s worth understanding the broader debate in incognito mode and flight prices myth or strategy.
Sometimes switching airports makes sense. Sometimes it just feels like it does.

Norvain Torrhaven has opinions about destination planning strategies. Informed ones, backed by real experience — but opinions nonetheless, and they doesn't try to disguise them as neutral observation. They thinks a lot of what gets written about Destination Planning Strategies, Hidden Gems, Tweak-Based Fare Optimization Tactics is either too cautious to be useful or too confident to be credible, and they's work tends to sit deliberately in the space between those two failure modes.
Reading Norvain's pieces, you get the sense of someone who has thought about this stuff seriously and arrived at actual conclusions — not just collected a range of perspectives and declined to pick one. That can be uncomfortable when they lands on something you disagree with. It's also why the writing is worth engaging with. Norvain isn't interested in telling people what they want to hear. They is interested in telling them what they actually thinks, with enough reasoning behind it that you can push back if you want to. That kind of intellectual honesty is rarer than it should be.
What Norvain is best at is the moment when a familiar topic reveals something unexpected — when the conventional wisdom turns out to be slightly off, or when a small shift in framing changes everything. They finds those moments consistently, which is why they's work tends to generate real discussion rather than just passive agreement.

