Packing for a family trip sounds simple—until you’re staring at four piles of clothes, a half-zipped suitcase, and a growing sense that you’ve either forgotten something essential or packed way too much. If you’ve ever wondered what the 5-4-3-2-1 packing method is, what the “golden rule” of packing actually means, or how to pack a suitcase efficiently with kids, this is the real-world version. We’ve tested the popular packing rules, ignored some completely, and rebuilt a system that actually works for family travel—especially when you’re balancing limited luggage, unpredictable plans, and kids who somehow need everything.
Every now and then, you see it.
A flight that doesn’t make sense.
£150 to New York.
£.
You refresh the page.
Check another site.
Try different dates.
Still there.
That’s a mistake fare.
And if you hesitate…
It disappears.
Quick Tip: Stop Guessing the Cheapest Day
There isn’t one “perfect” day to book flights.
Most packing rules work like this too — they sound simple, but fall apart in real life.
The real advantage comes from using systems (and tools) that actually show you:
- what you’ll actually wear
- what fits in your luggage
- what works across different climates
👉 We tested this properly while planning our flights and packing setup:
👉 We compared Aviasales vs Skyscanner to see which actually finds the cheapest options for families
What Is a Mistake Fare?
A mistake fare is a pricing error—simple as that.
It happens when airlines (or booking systems) accidentally publish flights at the wrong price.
Usually caused by:
- currency conversion errors
- missing taxes or fuel surcharges
- human input mistakes
- system glitches
The result?
Flights that are:
👉 significantly cheaper than they should be
Sometimes by hundreds.
Why Most People Never Find Them
It’s not because they’re rare.
It’s because they’re fast.
Mistake fares:
- appear randomly
- spread quickly
- disappear within hours (sometimes minutes)
So if you’re:
- casually browsing
- checking once in a while
- relying on luck
You’ll miss them almost every time.
The Shift: You Don’t Search for Them—You Catch Them
This is where most people get it wrong.
They think:
👉 “I’ll try and find mistake fares”
But that’s not how it works.
Mistake fares come to:
👉 people who are set up to catch them
That means:
- alerts
- tools
- speed
Not manual searching.
What Actually Helps You Find Them (The Real Levers)
Instead of chasing random deals, focus on:
- Visibility → seeing price drops early
- Speed → acting before they disappear
- Flexibility → being able to use them
That’s the real system.
Best Websites to Find Mistake Fares (What Actually Works)
Most people miss these deals because they’re looking in the wrong places.
If you’re relying on:
- airline websites
- Google searches
- random browsing
You’re already too late.
Here’s what actually works:
1. Flight Search Platforms (Your Core Tools)
These give you real-time visibility across airlines:
- Skyscanner
- Aviasales
They’re not “mistake fare tools” specifically.
But they:
👉 surface unusual price drops
👉 show cheapest combinations
👉 reveal pricing patterns quickly
👉 We break this down properly here:
Because when something weird appears…
You need to spot it fast.
2. Deal Alert Platforms (Done-for-You Scanning)
These track and send deals to you:
- Going (Scott’s Cheap Flights)
- Secret Flying
- Jack’s Flight Club
They’re useful because:
👉 they do the work
👉 you just react
3. Google Flights (Quietly Powerful)
Not flashy—but effective.
Use it to:
- track routes
- monitor pricing
- spot drops early
👉 Reality check:
No tool guarantees mistake fares.
But the right setup:
👉 massively increases your chances
How to Set Yourself Up to Catch Them
This is where things start to click.
You don’t need to be constantly searching.
You need to be:
👉 positioned correctly
1. Set Price Alerts
Pick:
- routes you’re interested in
- flexible destinations
Then track them.
This way:
👉 deals come to you
2. Use “Everywhere” Searches
Instead of:
👉 fixed destinations
Search:
👉 “anywhere”
You’ll spot:
- random cheap routes
- unexpected deals
- mistake fares hiding in plain sight
3. Stay Slightly Flexible
You don’t need full flexibility.
But even:
- different departure days
- nearby airports
can turn a useless deal into a usable one.
What to Do When You Find a Mistake Fare (Step-by-Step)
This is where most people lose the opportunity.
They hesitate.
They overthink.
They wait.
And it’s gone.
Step 1: Double Check Quickly
Make sure:
- dates are correct
- route is real
- airline is legit
Don’t overanalyse—just confirm.
Step 2: Book Fast
If it works for you:
👉 book it
Mistake fares don’t wait.
Step 3: Book Direct If Possible
If available:
👉 go through the airline
It reduces risk if anything changes later.
Step 4: Don’t Lock Everything In Yet
Hold off on:
- hotels
- tours
- extras
Give it a little time.
Step 5: Accept Imperfection
It might not be:
- ideal dates
- perfect timing
- closest airport
But if the price is significantly lower…
It can still be worth it.
Are Mistake Fares Worth It for Families?
This is where things get real.
Because most advice ignores this completely.
Mistake fares are easiest for:
- solo travellers
- couples
- flexible schedules
Families?
More complicated.
Why They’re Harder
- multiple seats needed
- school schedules
- less flexibility
- more planning required
How to Make Them Work Anyway
Instead of chasing every deal:
👉 focus on:
- destinations you already want
- wider time windows
- partial flexibility
You won’t use every deal.
But when one fits…
It can save a lot.
The System We Actually Use
We don’t chase every deal.
We:
- scan using tools
- stay flexible where possible
- act quickly when something stands out
That’s it.
Simple.
Repeatable.
Want the Full Setup?
We’ve put everything into one place.
Our Family Travel Toolkit includes:
- how we find cheap flights
- the exact tools we use
- how we plan travel without overspending
Final Thought
Mistake fares aren’t about luck.
They’re about:
- being ready
- being set up
- and moving fast
You won’t catch all of them.
But when you catch one…
It changes how you think about flight costs completely.