A new year means new destinations and experiences.  This article from the New York Times will get your year started off right.
Break a resolution yet? If any were travel-related, here’s some good 
news: In 2014, you can save while staying the traveler that you are.
In other words, set your nonnegotiable standards, then minimize costs 
and maximize value. For example: Let’s say you refuse to sleep in the 
same room with a stranger. That means you won’t be staying in hostels, 
so concentrate on lowering costs on hotel stays or short-term rentals.
Here are four issues about which budget travelers of good faith can 
differ, and some tips on cutting costs no matter which side of the 
debate you’re on.
A Room of One’s Own?
This is no longer just a hostel versus hotel debate. Private rentals 
through Airbnb have long been in the mainstream, and hospitality 
exchange sites like Couchsurfing and BeWelcome are thriving — two 
visitors from Lyon, France, who found me through Couchsurfing, are 
staying in my living room even as I write this.
Hostels, however, will still be the mainstay for backpacker types. Many 
use the big booking sites Hostelbookers.com or Hostelworld.com, but it’s
 also worth getting to know Hostelz.com, a search aggregator not unlike 
Kayak. You’ll get to compare prices for Hostelbookers and Hostelworld 
(as well as the Eurocentric site HostelsClub). But even better, the site
 also shows ratings from all the sites, as well as lengthier reviews 
Hostelz pays travelers to write. That’s especially important, because 
hostels vary as widely as hotels in comfort and cleanliness.
For those who need their privacy, don’t write off Airbnb; you can set 
filters to show you only private rooms or even entire houses. And 
despite the name, I’ve found that many Couchsurfing hosts (though not 
me) offer spare bedrooms.
If you really want to stick with just hotels, there are ever more ways 
to save. Two new sites monitor hotel prices after you reserve in case 
prices go down: TripRebel simply refunds you the difference, and TripBAM
 alerts you if the price drops in the same or nearby hotels and offers 
to rebook your reservation. For the truly picky, TheSuitest uses hotel 
features and amenities to calculate a room’s value relative to its 
price, so you can find the best deal on a place with, say, a gym or 
great views.
And finally, a compromise of sorts: the growing Britain-based Camp in My
 Garden (campinmygarden.com), on which users can offer their backyards 
to potential campers. It’s dirt cheap, and tents are, after all, 
completely private.
Connecting the Stops
On a flight from New York to São Paulo last year, I sat next to a young 
guy headed to Buenos Aires quite indirectly. He had long layovers in São
 Paulo and Montevideo, lengthening a 10-hour trip to more than 24 hours.
 But to him it was a no-brainer — he’d save a few hundred bucks.
If that sounds familiar, you probably already know how to list flights 
by price and set filters to allow multiple layovers on sites like Kayak 
and Bing Travel. And here’s another tip for flights in Europe: The 
WhichAirline app and site (whichairline.com) can help you find 
inconvenient but very cheap connections that other engines don’t. For 
example, it found me a $119 flight from Paris to Budapest on the budget 
carrier Ryanair, with a layover of about five hours in Milan each way. 
(The cheapest option on the usually dependable Vayama.com was $280.)
If you’re anti-layover, consider making your dates more flexible. It’s 
far easier than it used to be. About a year ago, Google introduced 
Flight Explorer (google.com/flights/explore), which displays a bar graph
 for the best prices to a specific destination over any specified time 
range. Even better, be flexible about your destination: Pick a region 
(“Western Europe”) and it will show you those same bar graphs for 
multiple destinations, starting with the cheapest options. You can also 
set the maximum length of the trip.
Miles Mania
 There are two kinds of fliers: miles obsessives who pay more upfront 
for airlines in a specific alliance and shuffle miles-accruing credit 
cards to reap free flights at the end; and others who can’t be bothered,
 who just look to save on each individual flight, car rental and hotel, 
regardless of the brand.
Being a miles maniac requires a steep learning curve in a world that 
seems to be both endlessly complicated and constantly shifting. 
Navigating this world requires a lot of help, and many turn to smart 
sites like ThePointsGuy.com. Two new ones are also worth a look: 
Altimetr.com debuted in June, and though it often takes a higher-end 
approach, evaluating business class service and private jets, it 
includes plenty of articles for the rest of us, like comparisons of 
frequent-flier programs and a useful intro to the whole points game.
If it’s all about frugality for you, try RichmondSavers.com, courtesy of
 a husband and wife team of C.P.A.s in Virginia, which focuses more 
closely on how to save big. Their step-by-step guide to a free family 
trip to Disney World is a good test of whether miles mania is right for 
you.
The Grid: On or Off?
I post to Twitter and Instagram wherever I go, but not without feeling 
conflicted: It’s fun, but it’s also part of my job. I’m not sure I would
 do it if I were traveling for pure pleasure.
But for fans of social media — and other sorts of data usage — it’s 
undeniably getting cheaper to stay connected. Last year, T-Mobile became
 the first major carrier to include international data in its regular 
domestic plans; customers can now check their email in Mongolia or post 
to Facebook from Frankfurt with no additional charge. (There is one 
catch: the free data comes with a promise of only 2G coverage, though 
you can pay for 3G and 4G, as with other carriers.) And there’s no 
reason anymore to pay for international text messages; that’s what 
What’s App and its ever-growing list of competitors are for. (Of course,
 you can also use local or international SIM cards.) 
Those who do pay for data now can use it to save money more easily than 
before. Last year saw Google’s Field Trip (fieldtripper.com) make the 
jump from Android to iPhone. The app alerts you when you are near 
attractions, restaurants, sales and the like, using information from an 
ever-growing list of sources. It’s customizable, and I’ve been teaching 
mine to stick to the cheap stuff. Now, among other things, it alerts me 
when I’m near a restaurant reviewed by master hole-in-the-wall-finder 
Robert Sietsema for Eater.com.
Of course, those who prefer to stay out of touch and find things the 
old-fashioned way don’t require any fancy technology tips to help them 
save. In 2014, as in 1914, they’ll get their budget travel advice from 
handy analog devices called human beings.