Budgeting a trip only by flight and hotel leaves you with 30 to 40% less money than needed. Extra baggage charged per leg, city tourism tax, mandatory Schengen insurance, embedded VAT in European hotels, 18% tipping in the US, roaming, hotel Wi-Fi, and ATM exchange rates form a parallel budget. See the spreadsheet by category, by region, and in three scenarios: backpacker, mid-range, and luxury.
16 min read
The first budget spreadsheet everyone makes has four lines: flight, hotel, food, tours. Add, multiply by day, done. Then comes the real trip, and the card comes back with 30% more.
It's not that the person overspent. It's that the spreadsheet was incomplete.
There's a set of invisible costs that don't appear in any simulator, any "how much I spent in X" YouTube video, and almost no blog report. They are not optional — they are structural. They are in the airline's rule, the city's law, the hotel's contract, the local culture. Those who don't budget for them, pay for them anyway. Just by surprise.
This article breaks down each category, each value range by region, and concludes with a model spreadsheet with three traveler scenarios: backpacker, mid-range, and luxury. The idea is that after this, your next trip will have a realistic, not optimistic, final number.
Why the "normal" budget fails
Most people budget in visible categories: flight, hotel, food, attractions. These categories have a displayed price — Google Flights, Booking, TripAdvisor. You add them up and feel in control.
The problem is that these four lines, on average for an international trip of 7 to 14 days, represent 60 to 70% of the total expense. The other 30 to 40% are scattered across items that no one adds up when deciding if the trip is feasible.
When the budget blows up, the traveler blames "shopping." Rarely is it. It's the sum of 15 small categories that no one was watching.
The method here is to reverse: list all the invisible categories first, assign an average value by region, and only then close with flight and hotel.
The 11 categories of invisible costs
1. Checked baggage — charged per leg
This is the champion of blown budgets. The person buys the "cheap" ticket and discovers at check-in that the bag costs more than the ticket itself.
The rule no one reads: checked baggage is charged per operated leg, not per trip.
- Direct flight JFK-London: pay once. Return pays another. Total: 2 charges.
- Flight JFK-London-Madrid (connection): may pay on both legs of the outbound + two on the return. Total: 4 charges.
- European low-cost (Ryanair, Wizz, EasyJet): if bought at the airport counter, costs €55-75 per leg. Buying online in advance drops to €30-45.
Value range per leg:
| Airline type | Average price (1st 23kg bag) |
|---|---|
| Full-service airline (Latam, Tap, Lufthansa) on international route | US$ 0-70 included or separate |
| Full-service airline on domestic US route | US$ 35-45 |
| European low-cost (online) | €30-45 |
| European low-cost (counter) | €55-75 |
| Asian low-cost (AirAsia, Scoot) | US$ 25-50 |
Realistic calculation: a 14-day trip through Europe with 3 intermediate low-cost flights pays baggage 6 times. At €40 per leg, that's €240 (~US$ 260) just for luggage.
2. City tourism tax
Exists in more than 40 European cities and destinations like Bali, Dubai, and some Japanese cities. Charged by the hotel, passed on to the city hall.
Does not appear on Booking until the final screen. Does not go on the reservation card — you pay in cash at check-out.
Typical values (per person, per night):
| City | Value | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Venice | €5-10 | Rises in high season |
| Barcelona | €4 + €4 (regional) | Increased in 2025 |
| Rome | €3-7 | Varies by hotel stars |
| Paris | €1-5 | By stars |
| Berlin | 5% of hotel value | — |
| Amsterdam | 12.5% of hotel | Europe's most expensive |
| Lisbon | €4 | Increased from €2 in 2024 |
| Porto | €3 | — |
| Kyoto | ¥200/night | — |
| Bali (Indonesia) | IDR 150,000 (~US$ 10) | Charged once upon arrival |
| Dubai | AED 7-20 | By stars |
Realistic calculation: couple, 5 nights in Venice in July = €100 in tax. Five nights in Amsterdam in a €250 hotel = €156 just in tax.
3. VAT embedded in European hotel
Unlike Brazil, in Europe the hotel VAT (between 6 and 25%) may appear at check-out, not in the advertised price. Booking started correcting in 2024, but direct bookings in small hotels, hostels, and B&Bs still show "net rate."
Always confirm: "total amount including all taxes."
Hotel VAT ranges:
| Country | Hotel VAT |
|---|---|
| Portugal | 6% |
| Spain | 10% |
| France | 10% |
| Italy | 10% |
| Germany | 7% |
| United Kingdom | 20% |
| Netherlands | 9% |
| Switzerland | 3.8% |
In London, a £150/night booking turns into £180. Those who budgeted £150 were 20% off.
4. Schengen health insurance (and equivalents)
Mandatory by law to enter the Schengen area. Minimum coverage of €30,000 for medical expenses and repatriation. Without insurance, the embassy denies the visa. For Brazilians who do not need a visa (tourism up to 90 days), the airline may still ask at boarding, and border police may ask upon arrival.
Average price for 10 days:
| Type | Price |
|---|---|
| Basic Schengen (€30k) | US$ 30-50 |
| Schengen + baggage + cancellation | US$ 60-100 |
| USA / Canada (US$ 100k coverage) | US$ 50-90 |
| Asia / Oceania | US$ 40-80 |
| Annual multi-trip (unlimited days per trip, up to 60 days each) | US$ 350-600 |
For those traveling 3+ times a year, annual pays for itself.
5. Visas and electronic authorizations
Even "visa-free" destinations charge electronic authorization.
| Destination | Document | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| United States | ESTA (if with Global Entry) or B1/B2 visa | US$ 21 (ESTA) / US$ 185 (B1/B2) |
| United Kingdom | ETA | £16 |
| European Union (Schengen) | ETIAS (effective 2026) | €7 |
| Australia | ETA | A$ 22 |
| Canada | eTA | C$ 7 |
| Schengen with visa required | Visa C | €80 |
| Japan | Not needed (up to 90 days) | 0 |
| Thailand | Not needed (up to 60 days) | 0 |
| India | e-Visa | US$ 25 |
Couple going to the US + UK pre-Brexit fees: 2 ESTAs + 2 ETAs = US$ 42 + £32 = ~US$ 80. Small, but it counts.
6. Tipping — the "invisible salary" in many destinations
Tipping varies more than any other category. In some countries, it's 15-22% of the restaurant bill. In others, it offends if you tip.
| Region | Restaurant | Hotel baggage | Room/day | Uber/taxi |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | 18-22% | US$ 1-2 per bag | US$ 3-5 | 15-20% |
| Canada | 15-20% | C$ 2 per bag | C$ 3 | 10-15% |
| Latin America (Argentina, Mexico, Peru) | 10% | US$ 1 | US$ 1 | Round up |
| Western Europe | Included or 5-10% | €1 | €1 | Round up |
| United Kingdom | 12.5% (service charge) | £1 | £1 | Round up |
| Japan | ZERO. Offends. | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| South Korea | Zero | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| China | Zero | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Southeast Asia (Thailand, Vietnam) | 5-10% in tourist places, zero locally | THB 20 | THB 20 | Round up |
| Australia | Not mandatory (10% in fine dining) | 0 | 0 | Round up |
| Dubai / Emirates | 10% (often already in service) | AED 5 | AED 5 | Round up |
Realistic calculation for the USA: couple, 14 days, with 2 meals out per day spending an average of US$ 80/meal = US$ 80 × 28 × 20% = US$ 448 just in restaurant tips. Add baggage, housekeeping, Uber: US$ 600-700 in tips on the trip.
7. International ATM exchange
Covered in detail at /iof-spread-cartao-internacional-2026. Summary:
- Hidden spread from the issuing bank: 1-4%
- Hidden spread from the network (Visa/Master): 1-2%
- Fixed fee from the foreign ATM: US$ 3-7
- Fee from your home bank per international withdrawal: $3-7
- Dynamic currency conversion (DCC) markup if you accept paying in USD abroad: 3-5%
On a trip with 4 withdrawals of US$ 200 at an American ATM and US$ 1,500 in card purchases, the invisible exchange cost is around US$ 80-130.
8. Lost or delayed baggage
Happens in 0.7% of international flights according to IATA 2024. Sounds low. Those affected spend US$ 200-500 on emergency purchases (clothing, hygiene, charger) while the bag doesn't show up.
Airline reimburses only if you provide a receipt for what you bought and show it was strictly necessary. Takes 30-90 days.
Good travel insurance includes advance for delayed baggage (US$ 100-200 in the first 12-24h). Worth checking.
9. Impulse buys in duty-free
Card data (Mastercard reports 2023-2024): U.S. travelers spend an average of $180 in duty-free on departure or return, unplanned. Perfume, whiskey, chocolate, electronics.
Not "wrong" — just not budgeted. And it counts towards the $800 personal exemption when returning to the U.S. via CBP.
Trick: enter duty-free with a closed list and timed (20 minutes max). Those who enter "to take a look" and have 2h of connection leave with 3x more.
10. Paid hotel Wi-Fi and roaming
4-5 star hotels in Tokyo, Singapore, Dubai, and part of Europe charge for Wi-Fi. Range: €10-25 per day. 3-star hotels generally offer it for free.
Roaming from your U.S. carrier: Verizon/AT&T/T-Mobile international day passes cost $10-12/day with data cap (usually 500MB high-speed).
International eSIM (Airalo, Holafly, Saily): US$ 10-25 for the entire trip (5-20GB). Activates in 5 minutes on the app, even before boarding.
For a 10-day trip, eSIM easily saves $50-80 compared to roaming.
11. Airport-city transport
Forgotten item. In some cities, it's trivial (metro for €5). In others, US$ 80 just for a taxi.
| City | Airport → Center |
|---|---|
| New York (JFK) | US$ 70-90 taxi / US$ 11 AirTrain+subway |
| Los Angeles (LAX) | US$ 50-70 Uber / US$ 9.75 FlyAway bus |
| London (LHR) | £25 Heathrow Express / £5.50 subway (Piccadilly) |
| Paris (CDG) | €56 flat taxi / €10.30 RER B |
| Tokyo (NRT) | ¥3,200 Narita Express (~US$ 22) |
| Miami (MIA) | $30-45 Uber / $2.65 Metrobus 150 |
| Rome (FCO) | €50 flat taxi / €14 Leonardo Express |
Couple taking a taxi from JFK and back = US$ 160. Couple using AirTrain = US$ 22. Difference of US$ 138 in a single trip.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
Expertise




