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Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

🦫 All You Need to Know About Buc-ee’s: America’s Favorite Road Trip Pit Stop

Move over, regular gas stations. There’s a new king of the road, and it’s got 120 gas pumps, the cleanest restrooms in the nation, and a beaver mascot that has stolen our hearts (and our wallets). Whether you’re a first-timer or a proud Buc-ee’s veteran with a sticker on your minivan, here’s why stopping at Buc-ee’s is mandatory for any family road trip worth its beef jerky.

1. 🚽 The Restrooms Deserve a Gold Medal

Let’s start with the obvious. Buc-ee’s doesn’t just have clean bathrooms—it has legendary bathrooms.  All other bathrooms bow before the Buc-ee’s thrones.

  • Spotless floors, touch-free everything, and private stalls that feel like a spa

  • You leave feeling refreshed, not traumatized

  • Your kids will actually want to pee there. That alone deserves a standing ovation.

2. 🛍️ The Gift Shop Is a Vortex and We Are Here For It!

You walked in for a bathroom break. You walked out with:

  • A “Don’t Mess With Texas” Buc-ee’s hoodie

  • A glitter beaver tumbler

  • A six-pack of jalapeño honey mustard pretzels

  • A lawn chair

  • A baby onesie, even if you don’t have a baby

No regrets.

3. 🍖 The Wall. Of. Jerky.

That’s right. Buc-ee’s has an entire wall dedicated to jerky.

  • Smoked, peppered, teriyaki, ghost pepper… you name it

  • Jerky so good your kids might actually stop asking “Are we there yet?” for a solid 20 miles

  • It’s basically a protein-packed peace offering for all passengers

4. 🥯 The Food Is So Good, It’s Suspicious

Buc-ee’s is what happens when a gas station and a gourmet food truck fall in love.

  • Brisket sandwiches so tender they’ve made grown men weep

  • Kolaches that will ruin you for all other pastries

  • Beaver Nuggets = sweet, crunchy caramel crack (legal crack, that is)

Your diet will not survive. And that’s okay.  Vacation calories don’t count, anyway.

5. 👕 The Merch is a Lifestyle

If you’ve never road-tripped in a Buc-ee’s shirt while sipping from a Buc-ee’s insulated cup and using a Buc-ee’s car freshener, are you even doing it right?

  • Matching family tees? You bet.

  • Christmas pajamas with beaver butts? Absolutely.

  • Buc-ee’s-themed Crocs charms? IYKYK.

6. ⛽ The Gas Pumps Are Endless. Literally.

You’ll never fight for a pump again.

  • 100+ pumps at most locations

  • No long waits, no awkward pump dancing

  • You’ll be fueled, fed, and back on the road in record time
    (…if you can escape the gift shop in under an hour.)

7. 🤠 It’s a Whole Vibe

Buc-ee’s is the spiritual center of American road-tripping.

  • You meet other families in matching Buc-ee’s gear

  • Truckers, teenagers, retirees, influencers—it’s a whole cross-section of humanity bound by the siren call of brisket and Beaver Nuggets

  • It’s where childhood memories are made, and your wallet cries happy tears

8. 🛻 It’s the Only Place Your Family Will Agree to Stop

Let’s be honest: “We’re stopping at a gas station” gets groans.


But say “We’re stopping at Buc-ee’s,” and suddenly the car explodes with excitement.

  • Kids sprint to the soda wall

  • Your partner’s already planning what fudge flavors to try

  • You’re secretly hoping they have new beaver socks in your size

It’s road trip diplomacy at its finest.

Honorable Mentions:

  • The Iced Coffee Bar – customizable heaven in a cup

  • The Home Decor Aisle – more throw pillows than Target

  • Holiday Buc-ee’s – themed merch for every season and it slaps

  • The Ice Machine – $0.79 for a 20lb bag?! What in the sorcery?

Did I mention Buc-ee's has character meet and greets? It's practically Disney World!

🚙 Final Verdict:

Buc-ee’s is not just a pit stop—it’s a pilgrimage.
So next time you see that majestic beaver face looming on the horizon, you know what to do:

✅ Pull over
✅ Pee like royalty
✅ Buy a $12 bag of candied pecans
✅ Wear that oversized Buc-ee’s hoodie like the proud road warrior you are

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure!

For future reference, be sure to save our post “Buc-ee’s: America’s Favorite Road Trip Pit Stop!”!   While you’re at it, take a look at our printable children’s travel journals; they are the perfect way to keep your kiddos entertained in the car.  Read about how you can start your own 50 State Challenge!  Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

📌 Save this post to Pinterest
📸 Follow us on Instagram @5suitcases
👍 Follow us on Facebook @5suitcases
▶️ Subscribe on YouTube @5suitcases

Categories
Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

How to Maximize Your Rest Stop Visits

Let’s be real. Before kids, rest stops were quick and efficient: gas up, stretch, go. Now? They’re full-blown productions involving snacks, stretching, possibly a meltdown over a vending machine, and some questionable handwashing techniques. But here’s the thing: handled well, rest stops can be a game-changer on the road.
 
A good rest stop routine can:
  • Minimize meltdowns
  • Maximize energy
  • Keep the car cleaner (bless it)
  • Restore everyone’s mood, even yours
So here are 10+ tips to help you nail the art of the rest stop routine—with a bit of humor, because you know you’ve shouted “Everyone pees or no one pees!” at least once.

Make Rest Stops Regular (Not Random)

Don’t just stop when someone’s on the brink of bladder disaster.
 
Aim for:
  • Every 2–3 hours for younger kids
  • Every 3–4 hours for older kids and grown-ups with iron bladders
Predictable stops help reduce:
  • “Are we there yet?”
  • “I forgot to pee.”
  • “I dropped my entire lunchbox, and now we have to pull over again.”
Use them for fuel (car and people), bathroom breaks, and a dose of fresh air.

Designate a Routine: Same Steps, Every Time

Kids thrive on routine—even in rest stops. Create a rhythm so they know what to expect. For example:
 
  1. Everyone uses the bathroom (non-negotiable)
  2. Refill water bottles
  3. Trash sweep (everyone brings out 2–3 things)
  4. Quick movement/stretching game
  5. Snack time (if needed)
  6. Back in, buckle up, drive on
This minimizes chaos and keeps things efficient. It also cuts down on the “Oh wait I need to go again” re-entry situations.

Use a “Rest Stop Bag” with the Essentials

Have a grab-and-go tote ready to carry in every time.
 
Include:
  • Hand sanitizer
  • Paper towels or napkins
  • Flushable wipes
  • Mini first-aid kit
  • Trash bags
  • Tissues
  • Change of clothes for younger kids (you know why)
That way, you’re not digging through five suitcases for a Band-Aid in a gas station parking lot.

Pack a Car-Friendly Trash Bag for Quick Cleanups

At every rest stop, do a quick car sweep. Everyone tosses wrappers, wipes, and random apple cores into a trash bag. It’s a 2-minute job that prevents The Great Car Crumb Crisis of 2025.
 
Plus, it teaches the kids that your car is not, in fact, a landfill.
 
When we pull over, we announce that we’ll be stopping in 10 minutes and have the kids gather all of their trash and clean up anything they took out of their bookbags.  This helps make exiting the vehicle quick and easy.

Make Movement Mandatory (Even for Grown-Ups)

Even five minutes of stretching or movement makes a big difference in preventing cranky legs and stiff backs.
 
Try:
  • Family jumping jacks (guaranteed giggles)
  • Walk around the parking lot or building
  • Simon Says or a mini dance party
  • Bring a ball, jump rope, or Frisbee for grassy stops
This helps burn off energy and makes getting back in the car way easier.

Don’t Underestimate the Power of a Good Snack Stop

Sometimes, rest stops are just about keeping blood sugar from bottoming out.
 
Have a cooler ready with:
  • Cheese sticks
  • Apple slices
  • Crackers
  • Granola bars
  • Yogurt tubes
  • And yes, a few fun snacks (because morale matters)
Use snack breaks strategically—especially when you sense tensions rising or energy crashing.

Choose the Right Stops

Not all rest stops are created equal.
 
If you can, aim for:
  • State-run rest areas with picnic tables and grassy areas
  • Large travel plazas (especially with indoor bathrooms and food courts)
  • Buc-ee’s because OMG!  If you haven’t been to Buc-ee’s yet, see if there’s one along your route.  It’s worth all of the chaos of getting in and out.  The snacks are superior, and the toilets are always clean.
Avoid sketchy gas stations when possible. If the restroom key is attached to a hubcap, keep driving.

Let Rest Stops Be Mini Memories

Not every stop has to be a pit stop. Some of our favorite road trip memories happen during:
  • Picnic lunches in random fields
  • Photos at weird roadside attractions
  • Getting ice cream from a gas station freezer that somehow hits different
Leave a little margin in your itinerary to enjoy these unexpected moments. Sometimes the detours are the best part.

Have a “Back in the Car” Routine

Re-entry is when things unravel—someone’s shoeless, someone’s crying, someone’s suddenly starving again.
 
Try this:
  • Everyone checks their shoes and personal items
  • Refill water bottles
  • Buckle up in silence (okay, maybe that’s a fantasy)
  • Give a 2-minute countdown before starting again
You can even make a playlist cue or road trip “reboarding song” to signal it’s time to roll. Pavlov would be proud.

Wrapping It Up: Rest Stops = Reset Buttons

Rest stops aren’t interruptions—they’re the glue that holds your road trip together. With a little routine and a touch of planning, they go from chaotic to calming (well, mostly). Use them to clean, calm, snack, stretch, and reconnect.
 
Next up in our Family Road Trip 101 series: “Buc-ee’s: Why America’s Favorite Road Trip Pit Stop is Basically Disney World for Snack-Lovers”

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure!

For future reference, be sure to save our post “Rest Stop Routines That Actually Work”!   While you’re at it, take a look at our printable children’s travel journals, they are the perfect way to keep your kiddos entertained in the car.  Read about how you can start your own 50 State Challenge or how to plan the perfect road trip.. Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

📌 Save this post to Pinterest
📸 Follow us on Instagram @5suitcases
👍 Follow us on Facebook @5suitcases
▶️ Subscribe on YouTube @5suitcases

Categories
Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

How to Budget for a Family Road Trip

Road trips are often billed as a budget-friendly way to travel—and they can be! But spoiler alert: between gas, snacks, lodging, and 14 souvenir keychains that absolutely had to happen, it adds up fast.

This post is your ultimate guide to road trip budgeting with kids in tow—complete with tips, tricks, and a few laughs to keep the sticker shock from stealing your road trip joy.

📝 Step 1: Build Your Budget Backwards

Start by asking the golden question: What can we actually afford to spend on this trip without needing to eat ramen for a month afterward?

Once you’ve got your total trip budget, break it down into the big categories:

  • 🚗 Transportation

  • 🛏️ Lodging

  • 🍔 Food

  • 🎢 Activities/Attractions

  • 🎁 Souvenirs

  • 🧼 Toiletries & incidentals

  • ⚠️ Emergency fund (because life happens)

Working backwards keeps you from splurging early and scrambling later when everyone wants to visit that extra amusement park.

🚗 Step 2: Calculate Your Transportation Costs

Gas is the unsung hero and biggest budget variable on most road trips. Here’s how to plan smart:

  • Use a fuel cost estimator like GasBuddy or AAA’s TripTik

  • Know your car’s average MPG and map your mileage

  • Account for detours, scenic routes, and the occasional wrong turn (it’s part of the charm, right?)

Pro tip: Gas station loyalty apps and cash discounts can save you a bundle over the course of a weeklong trip.

Don’t forget:

  • Tolls

  • Parking fees (especially in big cities or national parks)

  • Oil changes or pre-trip maintenance

🛏️ Step 3: Sleep Smart

Lodging is often the biggest chunk of the budget, but there are so many family-friendly ways to cut costs:

🏨 Hotels & Motels:

  • Look for places with free breakfast and kid-stay-free policies

  • Check to see if parking is paid or free.  Free parking FTW!
  • Compare prices on booking sites like Hotels.com, Expedia, or Hopper

  • Check for pool access (free entertainment = parenting win)

🏕️ Camping:

  • Campgrounds can be super affordable and memorable

  • KOAs, state parks, or even glamping options (if you’re semi-outdoorsy)

🏡 Rentals:

  • Vacation rentals (like Airbnb/VRBO) can be cost-effective, especially for larger families or longer stays

  • Bonus: kitchens = cooking = fewer restaurant bills

Pro tip: Mix it up! Camp for a few nights, then grab a hotel for a little comfort boost.

🍟 Step 4: Food—The Budget Buster in Disguise

Feeding your family is a daily expense, and road trip food can be sneaky expensive. Here’s how to keep bellies full without emptying your wallet:

🧺 Pack Ahead:

  • Stock a cooler with sandwiches, drinks, and fruit

  • Pack a snack bin with granola bars, crackers, fruit snacks, trail mix, and bribe-worthy treats

🍳 Book Lodging with Kitchens or Kitchenettes:

  • Cooking a few meals saves serious cash

  • Even a microwave and mini-fridge can work magic with oatmeal, mac & cheese, or sandwich fixings

🥤 Budget for Treats:

  • Ice cream stops, roadside diners, or local specialties are part of the experience—just don’t make every meal a splurge

🎢 Step 5: Fun Without Financial Fear

You don’t need to drop hundreds on tickets every day to make epic memories.

🎟️ Save on Attractions:

  • Buy tickets online in advance

  • Use city passes or national park passes

  • Look for museum or zoo reciprocity (especially if you have a membership at home)

  • Plan freebie days—hiking, beach days, or playground pit stops

Pro tip: Let each kid choose one “special activity” on the trip. You’ll save money and cut down on decision fatigue.

🧾 Step 6: Track Spending Like a Legend

Use a notes app, spreadsheet, or printable budget tracker to:

  • Log every gas fill-up, meal, and attraction

  • Adjust on the fly if you overspend in one category

  • Avoid post-trip wallet regret

You can even gamify it with your kids: “If we keep lunch under $25 today, we get an extra stop for milkshakes tomorrow!”

🎁 Step 7: Souvenirs on a Budget (That Aren’t Total Junk)

The best souvenirs don’t have to be expensive. Think:

  • Postcards

  • Pressed pennies

  • Local treats

  • DIY photo journals

  • One item per kid (set a dollar limit ahead of time)

You can also give each child a small envelope of “souvenir money” at the start of the trip—they’ll learn budgeting skills and stop asking for every glitter snow globe they see.

⚠️ Bonus: Build in a “Just In Case” Fund

Flat tire? Lose a retainer on a roller coaster? Spontaneous detour to a Broadway Show? Life happens.

Aim to keep 5–10% of your total trip budget tucked away in case of unexpected expenses. If you don’t use it—yay! Treat yourselves to a fun splurge on the last day.  Because…sometimes retainers DO fall out of your kid’s mouth when you’re at Hersheypark.  Trust us.  

🤪 Final Thoughts: Budgeting Without the Buzzkill

Budgeting might not sound glamorous, but having a financial plan for your road trip means more freedom, not less. You’ll spend less time stressing and more time soaking in the weird roadside attractions, family singalongs, and late-night snack raids.

Remember: it’s not about how much you spend—it’s about how much joy you squeeze out of every mile.

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure!

For future reference, be sure to save our post “Budgeting for a Framily Road Trip”!   Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

📌 Save this post to Pinterest
📸 Follow us on Instagram @5suitcases
👍 Follow us on Facebook @5suitcases
▶️ Subscribe on YouTube @5suitcases

Categories
Cancun Caribbean Denver Europe Lisbon Montego Bay Myrtle Beach Orlando Punta Cana San Diego San Juan Travel Tips United States Washington DC

10 Most Affordable Travel Destinations for Families

Family vacations don’t have to cost a fortune to be memorable. With a little planning, you can treat your kids to new adventures, beautiful sights, and fun activities without maxing out your credit card. Whether you’re looking for beachside bliss, theme park thrills, or cultural experiences, these ten destinations are budget-friendly and full of family magic.
 

Here are ten affordable places to travel with kids that offer maximum fun for less money.

Universal Studios Orlando

 U.S. Destinations

1. Orlando, Florida

You can do Orlando without blowing your budget—yes, even with the theme parks! While Disney and Universal can be pricey, there are tons of ways to save with off-site lodging, ticket deals, and alternate attractions.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Frequent flight deals, discounted theme park bundles, and budget-friendly hotels.
  • Best Time to Visit: January–February (off-season, fewer crowds), late August–October (cheaper park tickets).
  • Why kids will love it:

    • Meeting favorite characters at Disney World or Universal Studios.

    • Splashing around at free hotel pools or water parks.

    • Exploring LEGOLAND Florida (especially great for younger kids).

  • Top Family Activities: 
    Walt Disney World (Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Animal Kingdom, Hollywood Studios)
     Universal Orlando Resort (Wizarding World of Harry Potter, Volcano Bay)
     ICON Park (The Wheel, Madame Tussauds, SEA LIFE Aquarium)
  •  Free & Low-Cost Activities: Lake Eola Park, Disney Springs, Winter Park boat tours
  •  Savings Tip: Use discounted Disney/Universal tickets via Undercover Tourist, book an Airbnb with a kitchen to save on meals.

2. San Diego, California

San Diego is a laid-back coastal city packed with free or low-cost fun. With sunny weather, beautiful beaches, and family-focused attractions, it’s a fantastic spot for all ages.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Free beaches, outdoor attractions, and citywide GoCity Pass discounts.
  • Best Time to Visit: March–May (fewer crowds, great weather), September–November (cheaper flights & hotels).
  • Why kids will love it:

    • Visiting the San Diego Zoo and Balboa Park’s kid-friendly museums.

    • Playing in the sand at Coronado or La Jolla Shores.

    • Exploring tide pools and spotting sea lions.

     

  • Top Family Activities:
     San Diego Zoo (one of the best in the world)
     Balboa Park (museums, gardens, playgrounds)
     La Jolla Cove (seals, sea caves, snorkeling)
     USS Midway Museum (historic aircraft carrier)
     Free & Low-Cost Activities: Mission Beach, Torrey Pines hiking, Old Town San Diego
  • Savings Tip: Kids get free admission to major attractions in October (San Diego Kids Free Month!).
Dude...they actually let US inside the White House!

3. Washington, DC

The ultimate destination for free museums and American history. D.C. is perfect for curious kids and budget-conscious parents.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Many free museums and landmarks, great public transportation.
  • Best Time to Visit: Late March–June (cherry blossoms, great weather), September–November (fewer tourists).
  • Why kids will love it:

  • Top Family Activities:
     Smithsonian Museums (Air & Space, Natural History, American History – all free!)
     National Zoo (home to giant pandas – free admission)
     National Mall (Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, U.S. Capitol)
     Spy Museum (fun for kids, small entrance fee)
     Free & Low-Cost Activities: Changing of the Guard at Arlington Cemetery, paddle boating in Tidal Basin
  •  Savings Tip: Stay in Arlington, VA, or Silver Spring, MD, for cheaper hotels but easy metro access. Most of D.C.’s best attractions are free. Use the Metro to save on transportation and stay just outside the city for better lodging prices.

4. Denver, Colorado

If your crew loves the outdoors, Denver is a dream. It’s an easy-going, sunny city at the edge of the Rockies, packed with affordable family adventures.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Tons of free outdoor activities, affordable ski resorts in winter.
  • Best Time to Visit: June–September (hiking, national parks), December–March (budget skiing).
  • Why kids will love it:

    • Visiting the Denver Museum of Nature & Science or the Children’s Museum.

    • Exploring nearby mountains for hiking, biking, or even snow play.

    • Catching a Rockies game or paddle boating in City Park.

  • Top Family Activities:
     Rocky Mountain National Park (hiking, wildlife watching)
     Red Rocks Park & Amphitheater (free trails, scenic views)
     Denver Museum of Nature & Science (interactive exhibits)
     Denver Botanic Gardens (huge kids’ area)
     Free & Low-Cost Activities: City Park, Union Station, 16th Street Mall
  •  Savings Tip: Buy a Denver CityPASS to bundle museum & attraction tickets at a discount.  Denver has a walkable downtown and great public transit. Outdoor activities in nearby parks and trails are free!

5. Myrtle Beach, South Carolina

Affordable beachfront fun is Myrtle Beach’s specialty. It’s filled with family-friendly hotels, amusement parks, and entertainment options—many with wallet-friendly pricing.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Cheap beachfront hotels, free beaches, and affordable attractions.
  • Best Time to Visit: April–May (warm weather, lower prices), September–October (fewer tourists, cheaper stays)
  • Why kids will love it:.
    • Splashing in the waves or collecting seashells on the beach.
    • Riding the SkyWheel or playing mini golf.

    • Visiting Alligator Adventure or the Pirate’s Voyage dinner show.

    • Top Family Activities:
       Broadway at the Beach (shops, entertainment, kid-friendly shows)
       Ripley’s Aquarium (shark tunnel, glass-bottom boat rides)
       Family Kingdom Amusement Park (budget-friendly rides & water park)
       Free & Low-Cost Activities: Myrtle Beach Boardwalk, Huntington Beach State Park

    • Budget tip: Look for all-inclusive hotel deals with free breakfast and water park access. Off-season (spring or fall) travel is both cheaper and less crowded.

God of the Winds Temple, Tulum

Caribbean & Mexico Destinations

6. Cancun, Mexico

A tropical vacation that’s affordable? Say hello to Cancun. With stunning beaches, tons of resorts, and kid-approved excursions, it’s a great choice for families looking to relax or explore.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Frequent cheap flights, all-inclusive resorts with kid-friendly amenities.
  • Best Time to Visit: April–June (low season, better deals), late August–November (cheaper but hurricane risk).
  • Why kids will love it:
    • Swimming in cenotes or snorkeling near coral reefs.

    • Exploring ancient Mayan ruins at Tulum or Chichen Itza.

    • Enjoying kid-friendly pools and beach games at family resorts.

  • Top Family Activities:
     Xcaret Park (eco-park with underground rivers, wildlife, and Mayan culture)
     Isla Mujeres (beautiful beaches, snorkeling, golf carts for easy travel)
     Chichen Itza (Mayan ruins, one of the New 7 Wonders of the World)
     Free & Low-Cost Activities: Playa Delfines (free public beach), Cenotes (natural swimming holes)
  •  Savings Tip: Stay at family-friendly all-inclusives like Grand Palladium or Panama Jack (kids stay free deals).

7. San Juan, Puerto Rico

No passport needed if you’re coming from the U.S.—Puerto Rico is a Caribbean gem packed with culture, natural beauty, and affordable adventure.

  •  Why It’s Budget-Friendly: No passport needed for U.S. travelers, affordable street food, free beaches.
  • Best Time to Visit: April–June (cheaper than winter high season).
  • Why kids will love it:
    • Playing on Condado or Luquillo Beach.

    • Exploring the colorful streets and forts of Old San Juan.

    • Visiting El Yunque Rainforest for easy hikes and waterfalls.

    • Top Family Activities:
       Old San Juan (colorful colonial streets, El Morro Fort)
       El Yunque National Forest (rainforest hikes, waterfalls)
       Bioluminescent Bay (kayaking at night)
       Free & Low-Cost Activities: Isla Verde Beach, Paseo de la Princesa promenade

    • Savings Tip: Free beach access and inexpensive local eats (hello, mofongo and empanadillas!) make San Juan very family-budget friendly.

8. Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

Punta Cana offers classic Caribbean vibes with all-inclusive resorts that cater specifically to families—think kids’ clubs, water parks, and themed dinners.

 

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Many all-inclusive family resorts with kids’ clubs, free meals, and activities.
  • Best Time to Visit: May–June (off-season deals, warm weather).

Why kids will love it:

  • Building sandcastles and snorkeling in turquoise water.

  • Watching live shows or dancing at resort events.

  • Playing in resort water parks or kid zones.

  • Top Family Activities:
     Bavaro Beach (calm waters, great for kids)
     Scape Park (ziplining, caves, cenotes)
     Dolphin Explorer (interactive marine life experiences)
     Free & Low-Cost Activities: Hoyo Azul (natural swimming hole), Macao Beach
  •  Savings Tip: Look for kids-stay-free deals at all-inclusive resorts like Royalton or Melia Caribe Beach.

9. Montego Bay, Jamaica

Jamaica combines vibrant culture, beautiful beaches, and family hospitality. Montego Bay, in particular, is home to plenty of budget resorts and exciting activities for all ages.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Direct flights from the U.S., family-friendly all-inclusive resorts.
  • Best Time to Visit: April–June (cheaper than winter season).
  • Why kids will love it:
    • Riding river tubes or bamboo rafts.

    • Visiting the animal farm or playing at water parks.

    • Dancing to reggae music or tasting sweet Jamaican patties.

  • Top Family Activities:
     Dunn’s River Falls (waterfall climbing)
     Dolphin Cove (swim with dolphins, sharks, and stingrays)
     Mystic Mountain (bobsled ride, ziplining)
     Free & Low-Cost Activities: Doctor’s Cave Beach, Montego Bay Marine Park
  •  Savings Tip: Book an all-inclusive resort with airport transfers included to save on transportation.

Budget-Friendly Europe Destinations

10. Lisbon, Portugal

Lisbon is one of Europe’s best family travel bargains. It’s walkable, colorful, and packed with things to see—without the high price tag of other Western European cities.

  • Why It’s Budget-Friendly: Cheap flights, affordable public transport, free attractions.
  • Best Time to Visit: March–May or September–November (cheaper & good weather).
  • Why kids will love it:
    • Riding the yellow trams up the steep hills.

    • Exploring castles, towers, and pirate-y forts.

    • Snacking on sweet pastel de nata (custard tarts).

  • Top Family Activities:
     Tram 28 ride (scenic old town tour)
     Oceanário de Lisboa (Europe’s largest aquarium)
     Sintra day trip (fairy-tale castles & palaces)
  •  Savings Tip: Lisbon’s food, transport, and lodging are very budget-friendly, especially if you stay in a vacation rental and travel outside summer peak season.

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure

Affordable family travel isn’t about cutting corners—it’s about finding destinations that offer rich experiences, natural beauty, and built-in entertainment without hefty costs. Whether you’re beach-hopping in the Caribbean, museum-hopping in D.C., or castle-hopping in Portugal, these kid-approved spots offer big value and even bigger memories.

So pack those snacks, grab the favorite stuffed animals, and set off on a journey that proves family fun doesn’t have to come with a sky-high price tag.

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Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

8 Car Games That Will Keep the Kids Entertained

Because you can only play “I Spy” so many times before you lose your will to drive.
 
Let’s be real: road trips with kids are a special kind of magic—and by magic, we mean loud, snack-covered chaos that tests the limits of your patience, your minivan’s interior, and your playlist tolerance.
 
Enter: car games. They are not the ones that make you want to pull over and scream into the glove box, but the fun kind that keeps everyone entertained and relatively sane.
These car games are perfect for families who want to make the miles fly by without resorting to 6 straight hours of tablet time (though hey, we respect the screen-time strategy too).

🎲 1. Would You Rather? (Road Trip Edition)

This one’s a classic for a reason. It’s easy, needs no supplies, and can get hilariously weird real fast.
 
Examples:
  • Would you rather only eat gas station food for a week or only use porta-potties for a month?
  • Would you rather ride in a car full of chickens or goats?
Pro tip: Let each kid take turns being the question master. Just be prepared for some deeply philosophical debates about slime vs. poop.

🔤 2. The Alphabet Game

Scan the world outside your windows to find each letter of the alphabet on signs, license plates, or billboards—starting with A and going all the way to Z.
 
Twist: Play collaboratively instead of competitively, so it doesn’t turn into a backseat bloodbath.
 
Why it works: It keeps kids looking out the window, which miraculously reduces motion sickness and complaints of boredom.

🎶 3. Song Battle

Each person takes turns picking a song. Then the rest of the car rates it from 1 to 10. The person with the highest-scoring playlist wins bragging rights (and maybe gets to choose where to eat lunch).
 
Variations:
  • Categories like “best throwback,” “road trip anthem,” or “songs that make you dance in your seat.”
  • Let the kids be DJs with a pre-approved Spotify playlist.
Why it works: Instant entertainment and a sneaky way to introduce your kids to your 90s music obsession.

🧠 4. 20 Questions (But Make It Interesting)

One person thinks of something (a person, place, or thing), and the others ask yes/no questions to guess what it is.
Kid-friendly ideas to guess:
  • A Pixar character
  • A snack from the gas station
  • A weird animal
  • Someone in your family
Bonus rule: After 10 questions, the guessers can ask one silly question, like “Would it smell funny?” or “Could it fit in _____’s backpack?”

🤔 5. The License Plate Game (With a Twist)

Instead of just checking states off a list (though that’s fun too!), try one of these:
 
  • License Plate Acronyms: Make up what the letters stand for. (e.g., BHR = “Bananas Have Rights!”)
  • Point Game: Common states = 1 point. Rare states (Alaska, Hawaii, etc.) = 10 points.
Why it works: It combines spotting skills with creativity, which keeps it fresh longer.

🧃 6. Snack Draft

Okay, this one is equal parts game and snack distribution strategy.
Each player takes turns “drafting” a snack from the road trip stash. Once it’s picked, it’s yours. No trades. No take-backs. This adds intensity to Goldfish.
 
Why it works: It makes snack time last longer and adds some friendly competition. Plus, it keeps siblings from bickering over the last granola bar… theoretically.

🧙 7. Create-A-Story

Start with a sentence like, “Once upon a time, a family of raccoons went on a road trip…” and let each person add a sentence.
 
Add structure with themes like:
  • “Magical road trip gone wrong”
  • “The car that turned into a spaceship”
  • “The mysterious rest stop of doom”
Why it works: It gets wild fast. And it’s hilarious. Especially when your 6-year-old insists a dragon named Steve saves the day every time.

🤪 8. Silly Superpowers

Each person makes up a ridiculous superpower for themselves—think “I can turn broccoli into chocolate” or “I can speak fluent llama.”
 
Then, everyone votes on:
  • Most useful
  • Most ridiculous
  • Most likely to cause chaos
Why it works: Creative energy outlet. Plus, it’s the perfect game for that weird, punchy mood that hits around Hour 5.

Final Thoughts

The secret to road trip peace isn’t total silence—it’s finding games that balance fun, fairness, and just enough silliness to keep the car vibes light.
 
Play one game, switch it up when things start to unravel, and always—always—keep backup snacks.
 
Because let’s face it: if all else fails, bribery with gummy worms still counts as a parenting win.

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure

Up next in our Family Road Trip 101 series, we’ll share with you some tips on road trip safety.

Stay tuned to the blog for more tried-and-true road trip tips.

For future reference, be sure to save our post “Road Trip Games”!   Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

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Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

🚗 Car Organization Tips That Will Make You Feel Like a Genius

Here’s the thing: family road trips are magical. They’re full of belly laughs, spontaneous sing-alongs, and memories that last a lifetime. But you know what else they’re full of? Crumbs, chaos, and rogue crayons.

Enter: Organization that feels like sorcery.

This post is your ultimate guide to turning your family road trip into a well-oiled (and snack-stocked) machine—with car hacks so good, you’ll practically feel smug pulling into that rest stop with everything in its place.

🧳 Trunk Zone: Base Camp on Wheels

Think of your trunk as your command center. Here’s how to pack it like a pro:

✅ The Essentials Bin

  • First aid kit

  • Flashlight & batteries

  • Extra sunscreen and bug spray

  • Ziplock bags (for wet clothes, stinky socks, weird treasures they find)

  • TP or a roll of paper towels (just in case you find yourself somewhere too rustic)

✅ The "Oh No" Tote

  • Extra outfits for each kid (and one for you—trust us)

  • Baby wipes (even if you’re past the diaper stage)

  • Mini laundry bag for dirty stuff

  • Compact towel or blanket for surprise beach days or spills

✅ Snack Stockpile

  • Keep backup snacks in a hard plastic bin with a lid

  • Refill your in-cabin snack container from this stash each night

  • Bonus: label it “Do Not Touch Without Parental Supervision” (for your own sanity)

🎒 Seat-Back Superpower Stations

Seat-back organizers are a parenting miracle. Load each kid’s “zone” with:

  • Water bottle

  • Travel-size pack of wipes

  • Books or activity pads

  • Headphones (and chargers!)

  • One small pouch of “surprise” toys (rotate every few days)

Tip: Let each kid decorate theirs with stickers or their name to avoid turf wars.

🍿 Center Console = The Snack-and-Sanity Hub

This is prime real estate. Treat it like a mini command center:

  • Keep individually portioned snacks in a grabbin’ basket

  • Store trash bags, napkins, and gum/mints up front

  • Use a soft cooler between seats to keep drinks cold and meltdowns at bay

Bonus: Use silicone muffin cups in the console cupholders for coins, hair ties, and tiny stuff that otherwise disappears into the abyss.

🗂️ Glove Box of Glory

Turn your glove compartment into a parenting treasure chest:

  • Registration/insurance (yes, the boring stuff)

  • Road trip bingo or license plate game sheets

  • Notepad and pen (for keeping score or doodles)

  • Mini flashlight

  • A $10 emergency stash (for vending machines or gas station bribes)

🧼 Mess Management Like a Pro

The car will get messy—but you can be ready.

💩 Trash Duty:

  • Use a cereal container lined with a bag as a compact trash can

  • Keep a few grocery bags rolled up for quick toss-outs

  • Assign a “trash patrol” shift to the kids (bonus points for making it a game)

🧽 Cleaning Kit:

  • Wipes (baby and antibacterial)

  • Mini dustpan/brush

  • Lint roller (not just for pet hair—it’s a crumb magnet!)

  • Portable vacuum if you’re that level of extra (and no judgment if you are)

🎮 The “I’m Bored” Box

One tote or caddy filled with activities = sanity saver.

Fill it with:

Rotate items in and out to keep it feeling fresh. And yes, it’s okay if screens are part of the lineup too. You’re road tripping, not living off-grid.

🧊 Cooler Packing = Science + Strategy

Put the most-needed snacks on top and use frozen juice boxes as ice packs. Keep items in baggies or leakproof containers to avoid the dreaded “mystery cooler water.”

Consider a second small cooler just for drinks so you’re not digging through lunch every time someone’s thirsty.

⛺ Bonus: Overnight-Stop Grab Bag

Instead of hauling all the luggage into your hotel every night, pack a small overnight bag with:

  • PJs

  • Toothbrushes

  • A fresh outfit for everyone

  • Chargers

  • Any meds or comfort items

Leave the big suitcases in the car and just carry this one in like the travel wizard you are.

🎉 The Bottom Line: Organized = Enjoyable

Sure, the road will get bumpy. Someone will spill their juice. Someone else will scream “MOMMMMMM!” five minutes after you leave the last rest stop. But when you’re organized, you’ve got answers, options, and maybe even a snack in hand before the tears start.

Organization doesn’t just reduce mess—it reduces stress. And a smoother road trip means more time for singing loud, spotting buffalo, and laughing about how Dad pronounced “Mississippi” wrong on purpose.

You’ve got this. And if you don’t? At least you’ll know exactly where the wipes are.

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure

For future reference, be sure to save our post “Car Organization Tips”!   Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

📌 Save this post to Pinterest
📸 Follow us on Instagram @5suitcases
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Categories
Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

Snacks & Meals on the Go: How to Minimize the Messes!

Let’s just start with a truth bomb: feeding kids on a road trip is basically competitive sport meets science experiment. It requires planning, agility, mess-tolerance, and a sixth sense for when a meltdown is food-related. Whether you’re packing sandwiches in the driveway or pulling over for your fourth fast-food stop, this guide has your back (and your backseat).

So grab your snack bags, fill up that cooler, and let’s dive into the wonderfully sticky world of road trip eats.

🍿 The Road Trip Snack Commandments

Snacks are the holy grail of road trip happiness. But not all snacks are created equal. Here’s how to keep your crew fed and your upholstery (mostly) clean.

1. Thou Shalt Not Pack Only Sugar

Yes, fruit snacks are tiny joy bombs. But if your snack bag is 98% sugar, you’re basically fueling the Chaos Olympics. Mix in:

  • Protein power: cheese sticks, beef jerky, boiled eggs, nut butter packets

  • Complex carbs: pretzels, whole grain crackers, popcorn

  • Fresh stuff: apple slices, clementines, snap peas

Keep it balanced—like a mini lunchbox, minus the effort.

2. Snacks That Don’t Crumble = Parental Bliss

Avoid anything that shatters into a million pieces upon contact with toddler hands. No one wants to sit on crushed Goldfish three states later.

Try these MVPs:

  • Trail mix (watch for nuts if you have allergies)

  • Fruit leather

  • Mini muffins (wrapped individually!)

  • Applesauce pouches

  • Granola bars that don’t melt into lava (avoid chocolate-coated ones in the heat)

3. The Snack Tackle Box

Want to feel like a road trip genius? Create a snackle box! Use a craft supply organizer or bead box as a DIY snack sampler. Kids get tiny compartments filled with different treats—cheddar bunnies, grapes, marshmallows, cereal, etc.

It turns snack time into a fun activity… and buys you at least 30 quiet miles.

🍔 Meal Planning on the Move

Not every meal needs to be a pit stop at a gas station Taco Bell (although, no judgment—we’ve been there at 11pm). A little strategy can go a long way.

1. Plan a “Car Picnic” Day

If weather allows, find a scenic rest area or park and have a picnic. Everyone gets fresh air, a proper meal, and you might even skip screen time for 10 whole minutes.

What to pack:

  • Sandwiches or wraps (pro tip: pre-cut them and wrap individually)

  • Pasta salad in mason jars

  • Rotisserie chicken pulled into sandwich rolls

  • Veggie sticks + hummus in leakproof containers

  • Juice boxes, water bottles, and a few cookies for good measure

2. Master the Fast Food Hack

Not all drive-thrus are created equal. Here’s how to win the system:

  • Choose chains with mix-and-match kids’ meals (hello, Chick-fil-A fruit cup!)

  • Order a la carte—two grilled chicken sandwiches + a large fry can feed three kids cheaper than three full meals

  • Keep disposable food trays or lunchbox lids in the car so everyone has a “plate”

  • Wipe everything down before and after, because… reasons

3. Breakfast is the Easiest Meal to DIY

Hotel breakfasts are a goldmine. But for days on the road:

  • Muffins or bagels with cream cheese

  • Breakfast burritos (make ahead)

  • Yogurt pouches

  • Instant oatmeal + travel kettle (if you’re staying in hotels)

Pair with coffee. So much coffee.

🧊 Cooler Tips for Maximum Freshness

Every road warrior needs a quality cooler setup. Here’s how to pack it like a pro:

  • Layer by need: things you’ll use early on go on top

  • Freeze juice boxes to double as ice packs

  • Use silicone muffin cups inside the cooler to corral snacks

  • Pack frozen sponges in ziplock bags to keep things cool AND soak up condensation

  • Label perishables with a Sharpie: “Eat by Tuesday!”

Restock with ice at gas stations or ask hotels to refill your ice packs. Pro move.

🧻 Mess Management 101

Look, it’s not “if” a yogurt explodes, it’s “when.” Here’s how to stay (somewhat) ahead of the chaos:

1. Your Emergency Meal Kit

Keep a small tote or glove box kit with:

  • Wet wipes (lots)

  • Napkins or paper towels

  • Trash bags

  • Disposable silverware

  • Hand sanitizer

  • Bibs (if you’re still in the bib stage)

  • A change of clothes for each kid (and maybe one for you, because smoothie explosions are an equal opportunity offender)

2. Portable Trash Solutions

Don’t rely on the “cup holder trash can” lie. You’ll end up with a banana peel on the dashboard.

Instead:

🧁 When in Doubt, Bribe With Treats

Let’s be honest—dessert has its purpose. A surprise donut can fix a grumpy morning. A lollipop can buy you 30 minutes of peace. Don’t be afraid to strategically deploy the sweets when morale dips.

Some treat ideas:

  • Buc-ee’s Beaver Nuggets (if you’re lucky enough to pass one!)

  • Gummy bears

  • Smarties (less messy than chocolate)

  • Ice cream stop = reward for clean car behavior

  • Mystery snack bag with a riddle or joke attached

🥤 Hydration Without the “We Have to Pee Again!” Every 10 Minutes

Hydration is important, but no one wants to stop every exit. Solutions:

  • Give kids small water bottles and let them refill at rest stops

  • Avoid super sugary drinks (they spike AND crash)

  • Time drinks to after long stretches or before planned bathroom breaks

  • Teach kids the fine art of the “preemptive potty stop”

🍽️ Final Thought: Feeding the Family is a Full-Time Gig… Even on the Road

You’re not just packing snacks—you’re fueling the adventure. You’re keeping the peace, feeding their bellies and their memories. Will it be messy? Of course. Will someone drop a cheese stick under the seat and forget it? 100%.

But you’re making magic here. One bite, one gas station donut, one grape tossed into a sibling’s mouth at a time.

So load up your cooler, laugh through the chaos, and remember: you’re doing an amazing job—even if the backseat smells faintly of barbecue chips and banana.  

Next week, we’ll share with you 25 of our favorite road trip snacks!

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure!

For future reference, save our post “Snacks & Meals on the Go”!   Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

📌 Save this post to Pinterest
📸 Follow us on Instagram @5suitcases
👍 Follow us on Facebook @5suitcases
▶️ Subscribe on YouTube @5suitcases

**This post contains affiliate links for your shopping convenience 

Categories
Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

Our SECRETS to Keeping Kids Happy in the Car 

Let’s be real—spending hours in a metal box with kids is a unique blend of bonding, bickering, and bargaining. At some point between mile 12 and mile 243, you may begin to question all your life choices (especially the one where you packed three different trail mixes, and they only want the one with M&Ms).
 
But here’s the great news: road-tripping with kids can be fun. Really. With a bit of prep and a lot of snacks (okay, yes, we’re still packing those), you can turn your car into a mobile memory-maker instead of a rolling chaos chamber.
 
Below are 10+ tried-and-true tips to keep everyone smiling—or at least not shouting—until the next rest stop.

Embrace the Power of a Killer Playlist

Music can set the tone for the whole trip. Create a playlist before you go that includes:
  • Songs the kids know and love
  • Classics you can belt out together
  • Mellow tracks for quiet time or post-lunch wind-down
  • A few secretly-for-you songs because you deserve it
Bonus idea: let each kid DJ for 20-minute increments. It gives them a sense of control (which they’ll love) and helps you avoid hearing “Let It Go” on repeat for six hours straight.

Audiobooks & Podcasts Are Your Best Friends

Audiobooks are magical road trip tools. They quiet the car, capture imaginations, and reduce screen time without anyone noticing.
 
Great family-friendly audiobook ideas:
  • Harry Potter series
  • The Wild Robot by Peter Brown
  • Charlotte’s Web
  • The Mysterious Benedict Society
And don’t sleep on podcasts! Try:
  • Brains On!
  • Story Pirates
  • Smash Boom Best
  • Circle Round
  • Wow in the World
They’re free, easy to queue up, and make the miles fly.

Pack Surprise Entertainment

Create a stash of dollar-store treasures or Amazon finds that you slowly unveil during the trip.
 
Some ideas:
Presenting something new every so often gives kids something to look forward to—and can instantly reset a grumpy mood.

Play Classic Road Trip Games (Yes, They Still Work)

They’re old-school for a reason—road trip games pass the time and engage everyone in the car.
 
Favorites include:
  • The License Plate Game – how many states can you spot?
  • I Spy – with younger kids, limit it to “inside the car”
  • Would You Rather? – endless giggles and debate
  • 20 Questions – especially fun with animals or movie characters
  • Alphabet Game – spot letters A to Z in order on road signs and billboards
Even teens will secretly enjoy some of these… as long as no one calls it “cringey.”

Snack Smart (and Strategically)

Yes, snacks are basically currency on a road trip. But don’t hand over the whole snack stash at once.
 
Here’s the strategy:
  • Pack several small snack bags per kid, separated by hour or stop
  • Choose mess-free options: cheese sticks, granola bars, dried fruit, pretzels
  • Throw in a “fun” snack per day—maybe gummies or popcorn
  • Avoid entire bags of goldfish. You’ll be vacuuming them up for years.
Oh, and pack trash bags. So many trash bags.
 

Related Posts:

Give Each Kid an “Adventure Bag”

Empower them with their own little domain of entertainment and essentials.  Our kids have been packing their bags since they were 3 or 4.
 
A basic kit could include:
  • Headphones
  • Notebook and pens
  • A favorite book or comic
  • A small toy or two
  • Water bottle
  • Wipes or tissues
  • A snack or two

We also add some of the items listed above under “Surprise Entertainment.”

 
Letting them organize it themselves gives them ownership—and maybe saves you from being asked where the crayons went every five minutes.

Keep Screens in Your Back Pocket

Yes, screens are a beautiful gift from the travel gods. But using them strategically makes them even more magical.
 
Use screen time:
  • For the toughest stretches (traffic jams, post-lunch slumps, long boring highways)
  • As rewards for good behavior
  • For quiet time or to wind down before a nap
Don’t forget to preload content! Nothing sours the mood faster than “No WiFi” messages when trying to start a movie.

Plan for Pit Stops (and Make Them Fun)

Rest stops don’t have to be boring. Plan for stretch breaks with a little flair:
  • Bring a ball or jump rope for a 10-minute energy burn
  • Look for quirky roadside attractions—giant dinosaurs, anyone?
  • Keep a scavenger hunt list going that includes “weird bathroom,” “funny billboard,” or “mini-mart with a random gift shop.”
Even a short dance break by the car can reset everyone’s mood (yes, even yours).

Embrace the Magic of a “Quiet Time Hour”

Everyone. Quiet. For 60 minutes.
 
No talking, no music, no games.
 
Just audiobooks or silence.  Perhaps a bit of coloring or reading.
 
Frame it as a grown-up thing they get to participate in. Or say the car needs a “power recharge” and it’s helping it run longer (because hey, that’s only slightly untrue).
 
Bonus: You might actually hear yourself think.

Celebrate the Little Moments

Kids will remember the weird, wonderful, and completely random moments more than the perfectly planned ones.
  • Laugh at the wrong turns
  • Let them pick the gas station snack once
  • Take goofy selfies at roadside diners
  • Write down one thing you loved about each day together
You’re not just passing miles—you’re building family folklore.

Final Thoughts from the Third Row

Keeping kids happy in the car isn’t about making every moment magical. It’s about making enough moments magical to get you through the not-so-magical ones.
 
With a bit of planning, a sense of humor, and maybe a small bribe in the form of animal crackers, you’ll create a trip full of connection, laughter, and “remember when…” stories that get told for years.
 
And hey—when the kids are grown and planning their road trips, you’ll be the one laughing when they realize what legends you were.

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure

For future reference, be sure to save our post “Keeping Kids Happy in the Car!”!   While you’re at it, take a look at our printable children’s travel journals, they are the perfect way to keep your kiddos entertained in the car.  Read about how you can start your own 50 State Challenge or how to plan the perfect road trip.. Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

📌 Save this post to Pinterest
📸 Follow us on Instagram @5suitcases
👍 Follow us on Facebook @5suitcases
▶️ Subscribe on YouTube @5suitcases

**Please note that this post contains affiliate links for your shopping convenience. All opinions are my own. Pinkie swear**

Categories
Road Trip 101 Travel Tips

How to Plan the Perfect Family Road Trip Route

Let’s get one thing straight: planning the perfect family road trip route isn’t about plotting a flawless course where nothing goes wrong and every rest stop has gourmet coffee and sparkling bathrooms. That place doesn’t exist. (If it does, please send me the link immediately.)
 
But with a little strategy—and a healthy dose of humor—you can map out a trip that’s fun, flexible, and not entirely fueled by desperation and fruit snacks.
 
Whether you’re a Type A itinerary-maker or a fly-by-the-seat-of-your-car-seat parent, this post is for you. Let’s break down how to choose where to go, how far to drive, and how to balance practical stops with just enough whimsy to keep everyone excited.

Start With Your “Why”

Before you open Google Maps or start color-coding a spreadsheet (no judgment, you beautiful planner, you), take a moment to ask: Why are we doing this road trip in the first place?
 
Knowing your “why” will help shape your route. A chill beach-hopping trip looks different than a history-themed trek through Civil War battlefields (Gettysburg, anyone?)  or a National Park power tour. Start with the vibe, then build the map.

Pick a Realistic Destination (and Back)

This is the part where we embrace a hard truth: just because you can technically drive from Chicago to Yellowstone in two days doesn’t mean you should. Especially not with a toddler whose favorite activity is removing their socks and throwing them at their siblings.  Been there, done that.
 
Here’s a good rule of thumb for drive time with families:
  • With Littles (0–5): 4–5 hours max
  • With Big Kids (6–12): 6–7 hours
  • With Teens: 7–8 hours if they have snacks, chargers, and noise-canceling headphones
  • With Freaks of Nature: Our kids are so down for an adventure that they’re content being in a car for even longer than 8 hours!  We pack a ton of snacks, and they have their road trip essentials to keep them happy.
 
Break up longer distances into segments. Give yourself cushion time, not just for bathroom breaks but for those magical, unplanned moments—like discovering a roadside petting zoo or a gas station that sells deep-fried Oreos. (Road trip gold.)

Scenic vs. Direct: Choose Your Adventure

This is the classic road trip dilemma: do we take the direct route, or do we meander?
 
  • The Direct Route
    Best for: tight timelines, younger kids, trips where you’re just trying to get there already
    Bonus: fewer chances of someone getting carsick on twisty backroads.
  • The Scenic Route
    Best for: longer trips, kids who can handle a bit of extra time, or families who enjoy the “off the beaten path” vibe
    Bonus: Instagram-worthy views, quirky pit stops, and better storytelling later
Want a compromise? Plan your scenic stops around practical needs. Hit a beautiful state park for a picnic lunch or detour through a charming small town when you need to refuel. It’s the road trip version of sneaking spinach into mac and cheese.

Build in the “Three S’s”: Snacks, Stops, and Surprises

Every great route has flexibility built in. That’s where the “Three S’s” come in:
 
  • Snacks:
    Know your route well enough to identify snack needs. Pack your favorites, but also note where grocery stores or healthy options might pop up. This isn’t just survival—it’s morale management.
  • Stops:
    Aim for a real stop (not just a bathroom sprint) every 2–3 hours. Think parks, playgrounds, cool roadside attractions, or even just a pretty rest area. Pro tip: picnic lunches = budget win + fresh air.
  • Surprises:
    Leave space in your itinerary for the unexpected. That funny billboard advertising the “World’s Largest Rubber Band Ball”? Go see it. Let your kids pick one random stop. The best memories are often the least planned.

Tools to Help You Plot Like a Pro

Tech is your friend—but don’t rely only on it. Here’s a combo of apps and good old-fashioned know-how:
  • Google Maps or Waze: For plotting routes and spotting traffic
  • Roadtrippers: Lets you see cool stops, restaurants, and attractions along your route
  • iExit: Tells you what’s coming up on your highway exit (restrooms, food, etc.)
  • Offline Maps (like Maps.me): Great for dead zones in rural areas
  • Paper Map: Because GPS betrayal is real, and you don’t want to explain to your kids why you’re crying in a cornfield in Iowa

Get the Kids Involved

Yes, even the little ones. If they feel like part of the planning, they’ll be more engaged in the journey.
 
Let them:
  • Help choose stops from a list of options
  • Pick a “trip mascot” stuffed animal that tags along
  • Create a travel bingo or scavenger hunt game based on your route
You’re not just making memories—you’re building travel confidence in tiny humans.

Time It Right

Leaving at 6 AM might feel like punishment, but it can actually be genius if your kids will sleep through the first couple of hours. On the flip side, traveling during peak traffic or nap-deprivation zones? Not it.
 
Some tips:
  • Avoid rush hour if you’re going through a major city
  • Plan to stop for a longer break in the mid-afternoon (when everyone’s cranky)
  • Know your kids’ rhythms: time your driving for their happiest hours

Back-Up Plans = Sanity

Your route is not set in stone.
 
Repeat after me: It’s okay to change the plan.
 
To help my pretend I’m not Type-A as s***, I always have backup plans built into my itinerary.  Places that we can visit if there’s time, things that we can ditch, if needed.  Things to do in the event or rain, or when the kids were younger meltdowns.
 
Have a few backup stops saved on your phone in case:
  • A park is closed
  • It rains
  • Someone suddenly must pee even though they “didn’t have to go five minutes ago”
Flexibility is your co-pilot. Don’t try to control the journey—embrace the adventure.

Don’t Overplan Every Minute

You are not a cruise director. You are a road trip parent. There is a difference.
 
Structure is good—chaos is not. But overloading your days with 17 things to see/do/photo will make everyone grumpy by 2 PM.
 
Pick 1–2 anchor experiences per day. The rest? Leave it open. That’s where the magic lives.

Final Thoughts From the Driver’s Seat

Planning a road trip route with kids isn’t about perfection—it’s about purpose. Where do you want to go, and what do you want to feel along the way?
 
You can’t control traffic, weather, or your child’s sudden distaste for their favorite snacks. But you can craft a trip that mixes practicality with play, purpose with whimsy, and plans with just enough flexibility to make room for wonder.
 
So fire up your map apps, charge the tablets, and get ready to play navigator, snack curator, and chief memory maker.
 
Our next pitstop will be Mastering Google Maps for the Ultimate Road Trip Plan.  See you there!

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure

For future reference, be sure to save our post “Planning the Perfect Family Road Trip Route”!   While you’re at it, take a look at our printable children’s travel journals, they are the perfect way to keep your kiddos entertained in the car.  Read about how you can start your own 50 State Challenge!  Pin one of the images below to Pinterest.  Go ahead and follow 5 Suitcases on Pinterest while you’re at it!

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Categories
Road Trip 101

Why Road Tripping with Kids is Totally Worth It

Let’s be honest—family road trips don’t usually start with a serene sunrise and a packed car full of cooperative children humming show tunes. No, they typically begin with someone asking if we really need five pairs of shoes, the baby losing their mind because you looked at them wrong, and a snack bag that somehow takes up more space than the actual luggage.
 
And yet, we do it anyway. Not just because we’re brave (though, yes, absolutely, we are warriors of the open road), but because road-tripping with kids is one of the most rewarding, hilarious, and memory-packed ways to travel as a family.
 
In this Family Road Trip 101 series, I’ll be walking you through everything you need to plan, survive, and even enjoy hitting the road with your crew. But first, let’s talk about the “why.” Why do parents pile kids into a vehicle and set off into the great unknown armed only with baby wipes, granola bars, and questionable optimism?
 
Well, friend. Let me tell you.

The Case for Chaos: Why You Should Road Trip Anyway

Sure, flights are faster, cruises have buffets, and staycations involve way fewer miles on your car. But road trips? Road trips give you something the others can’t: flexibility, spontaneity, and the chance to shout “Cows on the left!” with unbridled enthusiasm.

1. You Get to Actually See the Country

Planes may take you places, but road trips let you experience them. Want to stop at the world’s largest rocking chair? You can. Feel like detouring through a national park because someone saw a bear on TikTok? Go for it. Your itinerary is yours to bend, twist, or throw out entirely.
 
And your kids? They’ll remember the random roadside diner where you played Uno for an hour more than the airport security line or the all-inclusive resort buffet.

2. It’s a Built-In Family Bonding Machine

There’s something about long car rides that forces connection. You’re in a confined space together, with nowhere to hide from deep conversations or dad jokes. This is where spontaneous heart-to-hearts happen, where kids ask big questions about life and you realize your third grader has surprisingly strong opinions about road signs.
 
And yes, there will be bickering. But there will also be inside jokes, group singalongs, and that magical moment when everyone’s laughing so hard they can’t breathe—and you almost forget how long you’ve been in the car.
Almost.

3. It’s (Mostly) Budget-Friendly

Unless your kids have developed a sudden craving for gas station sushi, road trips are one of the most affordable ways to travel as a family. You can pack your own snacks, stay in budget motels or campgrounds, and skip expensive airfare.
 
Plus, when you save money on travel, you can splurge on meaningful experiences—like a guided cave tour, a once-in-a-lifetime zipline adventure, or a comically large gummy bear from a novelty store in Missouri.

4. The Teachable Moments Are Everywhere

From geography and history to problem-solving and patience (so much patience), road trips are a rolling classroom. Your kids will learn how to read a map, how to be flexible when plans change, and how to share the backseat without causing a diplomatic incident.
 
They’ll also see the diversity of the landscape, different ways people live, and maybe even start asking deeper questions about the world around them. Or, at the very least, they’ll learn not to underestimate your ability to make up games on the fly.

What to Expect From This Series

This isn’t just a blog series. It’s your new co-pilot (minus the ability to reach into the backseat and stop your kids from fighting over the window seat).
 
Over the coming weeks, we’ll cover:
  • How to Plan the Perfect Route (without losing your mind or your map)
  • Packing Like a Pro (or at least like someone who didn’t forget the toothbrushes)
  • Using Google Maps Like a Pro
  • Feeding the Troops (snacks, meals, and strategies for avoiding hangry outbursts)
  • Entertainment Ideas for the Long Haul (with and without screens, because let’s be real—both are useful)
  • Making the Car a (Mostly) Comfortable Place to Be
  • Budget Tips Without Killing the Vibe
  • Smart Stops and Fun Detours
  • How to Handle the Unexpected Without a Meltdown (Yours or Theirs)
  • And, of course, Why All the Chaos is Absolutely Worth It
Every post will come with practical tips, personal stories, and just enough humor to make you feel like you’re not the only one who’s had to explain to your kid why we don’t collect roadkill as souvenirs.

My Road Trip Philosophy

I’m not here to pretend every mile is magical. Road trips with kids are messy, unpredictable, and occasionally make you question your life choices. But they’re also where some of my favorite family memories were made. From impromptu dance parties at rest stops to the time we accidentally ended up at a llama farm (long story), it’s all part of the adventure.
 
The mess is the magic. The detours are the stories your kids will tell someday. And the joy is in the journey—even if that journey includes five renditions of the “Baby Shark” remix.
So whether you’re road-tripping for a weekend or crossing state lines on an epic summer trek, this series is for you.
 
Let’s hit the road, snacks in hand and expectations somewhere between “total disaster” and “best trip ever.”

Final Thought Before the First Exit

No matter what your road trip looks like—whether your kids are toddlers or teens, whether your car is spotless or full of goldfish dust—know this: You’re creating something they’ll remember.
 
And in the end, it’s not about the perfectly posed photo or the Instagram-worthy destination. It’s about the time spent together, the laughs, the lessons, and the moments in between.
 
So buckle up. Turn up the playlist. And remember: you’ve got this.
 
 
See you there, road warrior.

Free Family Road Trip Starter Kit

🎶 Ready to hit the road with magic in the speakers?

Don’t forget to grab our FREE Family Road Trip Starter Kit — packed with printable checklists, kid-approved games, and snack ideas for your next adventure!

🎒 Includes:

  • Packing checklist

  • I Spy game

  • Travel Bingo boards

  • Snack list

  • Activity ideas

👉 Click here to download yours now!

Save a Pin & Start Planning Your Adventure!

📌 Save this post to Pinterest
📸 Follow us on Instagram @5suitcases
👍 Follow us on Facebook @5suitcases
▶️ Subscribe on YouTube @5suitcases

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