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Check Club Memberships and Credit Cards

Some last-minute deals might be sitting right in your wallet. AAA and AARP members can take advantage of discounts on car and truck rentals, hotels and resorts, air and rail tickets, cruises and tours, theme parks, and vacation packages. Your rewards credit card may offer some cut-rate travel options, as well. For example, spend $4,000 within the first three months of using the Chase Sapphire Preferred card and earn 60,000 points, which translates to $750 toward lodging, airfare, car rentals, and cruises when redeemed through the card's rewards program. Many credit card companies partner with airlines, hotels, resorts, and cruise lines to provide access to even more travel specials.

Related: You Won't Believe What These Travelers Got to Do on Points Alone

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Make It a Package

When there's no time to spare, land a flight, hotel, car rental — and even some activities — all at once. Online travel agencies such as Travelzoo, Priceline, or Expedia, Orbitz, and Travelocity (the final three are owned by the same company) let you arrange package deals that cost less than the sum of individually booked parts. Cheap Caribbean and BookIt are popular websites for setting up all-inclusive Caribbean getaways that include flight, hotel, and all meals and drinks. And some all-inclusive resorts are so family-friendly that kids may be welcome at no charge.

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Road Trip to a National Park

Visit a nearby national park for a relatively inexpensive summer vacation that appeals to all ages and can be arranged at the eleventh hour. There is always some new corner of the park to explore and tactics for making the visit even cheaper. For example, plan a trip for days when park entrance fees are waived; upcoming days in 2019 include Aug. 25 (National Park Service Day), Sept. 28 (National Public Lands Day), and Nov. 11 (Veterans Day Weekend). Moreover, a good many of the national parks — 306 out of 418 sites, which include monuments, recreation areas, and historic sites — don't normally charge entrance fees at all.

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Use Your Smartphone

Free travel apps for mobile devices can help score last-minute lodging and transportation deals and save money on other travel-related expenses. Whatever you're looking for, there's an app for that. Book a last-minute room on Hotel Tonight; cut costs on a road trip with Gasbuddy; snag a last-minute flight with Kayak or a cruise with iCruise; and so on.

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Stay Flexible

If there's some fluidity in your schedule — i.e., on times, airports, and departure dates — there are plenty of travel sites that will display how much can be saved by booking a day ahead or behind, on an earlier or later flight, or by using a nearby airport. Many travel sites offer discounts on flights, hotel stays, and resort packages when booked shortly before departure/arrival.

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Rent a Home

Instead of a hotel, look for savings through sites such as Airbnb and Homeaway. A search on home rental sites may turn up lodging that's vacant for a desired check-in date that's just a few days away. Contact the owner and try to negotiate a better price than the posted rates. Owners may be willing to accept a lower price than to get no revenue at all.

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Try Your Luck

If you're not picky about hotel brands or location, consider booking through sites such as Priceline and Hotwire. At these sites, hotels with unreserved rooms appear without identifying information, and you search by star rating, area, and desired nightly rate. Priceline and Hotwire reveal the specific hotel after you've booked. The accommodations you wind up with depend partly on luck, but you'll rack up substantial savings, especially in major cities.

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Take a Solo Trip

If no friends or family can take off on short notice, consider traveling on your own. Whether it's backpacking across Europe or island hopping through Thailand, it's often cheaper and easier to book for one person than for a group. Moreover, you can dictate your own itinerary and stick to your frugal ways. Think hostels and couch-surfing, lots of street food, and the single ticket to an orchestra performance that someone outside the theater is eagerly hawking.

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Buy All-Inclusive Passes

Major attractions in big cities cost big bucks, but all-inclusive passes such as Smart Destinations and CityPass can save some of those bucks for travelers with enough time and stamina. Smart Destinations is available in 18 major cities, as well as a pass for the entire state of Florida, and covers hundreds of attractions. The all-inclusive pass offers up to 55% off gate prices at big-name sites. CityPass provides sightseeing savings of up to 50% in 14 cities — including the newly offered Orlando — and lets you bypass the lines in some places. This pass is valid for most cities up to nine days. In Denver, the pass is good for seven days, and in Southern California and Orlando passes have varying validity periods depending on the specific tickets purchased.

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Consider Ground Travel

If you don't have far to go, or the route to your destination is particularly scenic, consider traveling by train or bus. Not only are tickets usually cheaper than airfare, but apps like Wanderu have a ground-travel search platform that allows people to find and book the best deals on inter-city bus and train travel. For example, a recent search between Los Angeles and Palm Springs, California, turned up bus tickets as low as $19. The app also searches destinations in Canada, Mexico, and Europe.