
7 Contests For Free Summer Trips To Orlando, Hawaii And The Caribbean
Win a free travel getaway this summer for you and your family.
Summer trips don't have to be expensive if you win one of these free travel contests and sweepstakes. From family vacations to Florida to couples-only, all-inclusive getaways, these offers could be your ticket to a much-needed vacation. They are all free to enter, and many include airfare and food and beverage credits.
The resort is celebrating its 35th anniversary with three special vacation giveaways.
Three separate Instagram contests are taking place this year to celebrate Grand Hyatt Kauai's 35th anniversary. Entering is simple: like the giveaway post on Instagram, follow the property's Instagram account @grandhyattkauai and comment on the post using the promotion hashtag #35YearsofAloha. Three lucky winners will receive a three-night vacation for two, complete with free breakfast, spa access, and waived parking and resort fees.
Sandals Dunn's River opened in 2023.
Between now and June 30, enter to win an all-inclusive getaway for two to the Sandals or Beaches Resort of your choice. All tips, taxes, gratuities and airport transfers are also part of the prize although airfare is not included. Among the resorts on the list are the newly opened Sandals St. Vincent and the Sandals Dunn's River, Jamaica, which opened in 2023.
A roller coaster ride at Sea World Orlando
Visit Orlando is offering four $250 flight vouchers on Frontier Airlines for the winner of this sweepstakes. The prize also includes a rental car and four nights at Renaissance Orlando at SeaWorld with free admission to the park. A $100 food and beverage credit and free parking are also part of the deal. Be sure to enter before July 9 for your chance to win.
The family pool at the Cadillac Hotel & Beach Club
Between now and the end of July, win a stay at the Cadillac Hotel & Beach Club in Miami. The property is part of Marriott Bonvoy's Autograph Collection hotels. It's easy to enter the sweepstakes to win a two-night stay in an Ocean Tower Suite, a $200 food and beverage credit, and a beachfront cabana.
An RV drives along the Icefields Parkway in Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada.
Through June 8, adventurous travelers have the chance to win the 'ultimate 2025 RV vacation getaway,' via a $2,500 Outdoorsy gift card. Entering the contest is free, and the winner can use the gift card to pay for the ideal RV to drive around the country. Also part of the prize: $2,000 in travel funds and a swag bag with goodies like water bottles and a travel hammock. Dubbed the 'Just Beyond Your Door Go RVing Adventure Giveaway,' the winner joins the 44 million other Americans that plan to take an RV adventure this summer, say experts at GoRVing. The winner will be announced on National Go RVing Day, June 14.
Win the getaway of your dreams with this free contest.
Win an all-expenses paid vacation from Tanteo Tequila to the destination of your dreams (yes, Tanteo is letting you pick where you go). Just in time for summer barbecue season, this giveaway has a free trip to Mexico as its grand prize, including airfare, hotel accommodations, spending money and free Tanteo-branded merchandise. The free-to-enter margharita-season contest lasts through the end of July.
Animal cheetah wildlife safari drive in South Africa
Author Simon Mustoe is celebrating his new book launch with a safari giveaway that is free to enter. Safari adventures are a bucket list vacation dream for many, but can be quite pricey. The prize includes roundtrip flights to Cape Town, a three-night stay in a Marriott Bonvoy family hotel, local tours, a two-night stay at the Inverdoorn Private Safari Lodge and cheetah educational tours.
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Some mobile carriers have partnered with carriers in other countries for more affordable roaming or even free service, albeit with some restrictions. For example, some plans -- like T-Mobile's Essentials -- offer free service in Canada and Mexico, but only at slow, 2G- or 3G-like speeds. So don't expect to stream much video on that connection. But traveling to most countries will require you to pay mobile roaming charges if you try to use data services, make voice calls or send text messages on your phone as normal. If that's your plan, check out our guide for the best travel phone plans. If you want to avoid mobile roaming charges, keep the following tips in up mobile service before you leave Some carriers will let you pick traveling service options ahead of time, which can include daily, weekly or monthly flat fees to get service from partner carriers in other countries. You can wait until you arrive at your destination and wait to be prompted to select your chosen service or you can set it up ahead of time. Note that some carriers will simply default you to these services rather than charge you higher roaming fees, although it's worth confirming before you travel. These international plans are pretty convenient, although some may come with caveats such as being deprioritized behind other carrier customers, meaning you'll get slower speeds during peak traffic times. Check the fine print of each travel plan to know its restrictions and what you may need to pay for extra service. Verizon's international plans start pretty simply, with $10 a day getting you 2GB per day of high-speed data and unlimited 3G-speeds data thereafter, as well as free voice calls and texting, in more than 210 countries. That plan is discounted to $5 per day in Canada and Mexico. If you have one of the carrier's latest plans, known as Unlimited Plus and Unlimited Welcome, you'll get these features included for Canada and Mexico. Customers with Verizon's top Unlimited Ultimate option will get this international data for Canada and Mexico as well as for more than 210 countries. Now Playing: Here's Why Your Phone Battery Still Sucks 02:46 AT&T has a similar $10-per-day travel plan for unlimited data, voice calls and text. The data counts against your usual plan's allowance; going over will result in a charge and/or reduced download speeds of a super slow 2G-like connection. If you don't sign up for this plan, traditional roaming fees kick in, charging per text message, megabyte of data and minute of voice calling. Unlimited data for Canada and Mexico is included in AT&T's main Unlimited plans, while the carrier's Unlimited Premium PL and Unlimited Elite plans also allow unlimited data in 20 Latin American countries. 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Getty Images Getting mobile service directly from a local carrier Before carriers got friendlier with their international agreements to support each other's customers, one of the better traveling strategies was to get service straight from the carrier in the country you were traveling in. Once you landed, you'd just walk into a local carrier's retail store and get a prepaid SIM card to last you the length of your trip. That's still possible today but it's a bit more complicated. If you have one of the many phones that lack a physical SIM slot, including the latest iPhone 15 series and Samsung Galaxy S24 series, you'll have to register for service through one of the eSIM accounts on your device. It's pretty easy to do and is in fact one of the benefits of having multiple digital eSIM slots -- so you can have one for domestic use and one for traveling -- but it requires you to register through the carrier in question. You can even load the eSIM before you travel, through apps such as Airalo and Ubigi. Unfortunately, there's something else to consider: whether your phone is unlocked, that is, not tied to a carrier and restricted in using eSIMs from other carriers (even international ones). If you bought your device unlocked, you're in the clear. If you're paying off your phone in installments from your carrier, it's complicated. Verizon users have it best, as their installment plans unlock phones after 60 days. AT&T and T-Mobile, however, require you to finish your installments and fully pay off your phone to unlock it. Because AT&T's plans have a minimum of 36 monthly installments, customers may be out of luck getting a local carrier eSIM unless they're nearing the end of their contract -- in which case it may make sense to pay the balance for more travel freedom. Relying on a hotspot and tethering Another method to avoid roaming is a bit more roundabout and requires you to sign up for service with a local carrier anyway but you won't have to fiddle with eSIMs. When you land in your country of travel, you can rent a mobile hotspot (or register service on one you already own), which is a handheld device that turns cell signals into Wi-Fi. Note that you'll still need to pay for service either from the hotspot maker or from a local carrier, and there's no guarantee that their networks will play nicely with a given hotspot device. Check that it'll work in the area you're traveling to. Once you have one set up, you just connect to the hotspot's Wi-Fi using your phone as normal. While it's a bit more cumbersome, this also lets you get internet for your other devices, such as tablets and laptops, pretty much anywhere you get a phone signal from a local carrier. Read more: Best cheap phone plan for 2024 Another caveat is that you'll need to keep the hotspot itself charged, which is another device battery you'll have to worry about. It might be worth carrying an external battery to make sure your hotspot can last a full day while you're out and about. Ultimately, whatever option you choose should fit your travel habits and destinations. Some carrier partnership options will be more appealing but offer slower speeds than getting service straight from the local carrier. But don't worry about getting locked into a choice: You can always try out one way when you arrive and switch to another if a better choice presents itself.