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Costco Executive Membership: How It Pays for Itself for Families Who Shop and Travel

If you travel even a few times a year, you’re probably already spending enough to make the Costco Executive Membership pay for itself, and you just haven’t done the math yet.

When booking trips, Costco Travel is always my first stop for price checking. Rental cars are almost always less expensive booking through Costco Travel, and the thing that catches me off guard is not the deals themselves, it’s how quickly the 2% reward adds up without us changing a single habit. We book trips, rental cars, groceries, and household shopping the way we normally would.

Here’s how it actually works, broken down for people who travel and just function in a family household.

The Basics

The Executive Membership costs $130+tax per year. In return, you earn 2% back on most Costco purchases, including Costco Travel bookings. At the end of the year, Costco sends you a reward check. You can use that check to renew your membership for the following year, which means after Year One, the Costco Executive membership can essentially cover its own cost.

The catch everyone gets stuck on: you need to spend about $6,500 annually to earn that $130 back. That sounds like a lot until you think about what travel actually costs and how regular runs to Costco on a busy Sunday afternoon add up.

Where Costco Travel Earns Its Keep

Vacation packages. This is where the value gets real. Costco bundles flights, hotels, and sometimes rental cars or excursions into packages that are genuinely competitive often less expensive that what you’d piece together on your own. One vacation package can easily run $2,000 to $4,000 for two people. Book one trip like that, and you’re already a third to halfway to the break-even number without trying.

Rental cars. For us, rental cars alone can push the reward faster than expected, especially when we’re stacking road trips, business, and family travel throughout the year.

Cruises. Costco doesn’t always beat all cruise fares, but they frequently include Costco Shop Cards as part of the deal, which adds value on top of the base price. Book, cruise, and when you return you could have up to a couple hundred dollars on a Costco Shop Card sent to you. It’s worth comparing Costco Travel before booking anywhere else.

The Math

The number that matters isn’t really the total $6,500. If you already plan to keep a Costco membership, the Executive upgrade is only $65 more than Gold Star, so the real break-even point is $3,250 in eligible yearly spend. For most traveling families, that can happen faster than you think.

One vacation package, a few rental car bookings across the year, a trip here and there, and regular Costco shopping on top of that, groceries, household supplies, less per gallon on gas (note: gas doesn’t count toward the 2% reward) and you’ve more than likely passed the $3,250 upgrade break-even without even trying.

The reward check shows up. You hand it to the membership desk or to the cashier at checkout, and next year’s membership is covered. You keep shopping and traveling the way you already were.

Honestly, we’ve reached the 2% cash back $130 reward check without booking a single travel trip. And in the years we don’t quite hit the full amount, the reward still covers the majority of the upgrade cost, which makes it worth it either way.

What Else Comes With It

The 2% back is the headline, but the Costco Executive Membership also includes perks that are easy to overlook: discounts on home and auto insurance, Executive Member shopping hours, which I’ve used to dodge the infamous Costco crowds, and access to deals that aren’t available at the standard Gold Star tier. None of these alone justify the upgrade, but stacked on top of the travel value, they round out the picture.

The Honest Take

Costco Travel isn’t going to beat every deal on the internet every time. But it’s consistently competitive, the booking process is simple, there are live customer service representatives if you need assistance, and the 2% back makes it worth checking here first before you book anywhere else. I chase the best possible value on every trip, building a habit of checking Costco Travel as part of my booking routine and letting the reward take care of itself.

You’re already spending the money. You might as well get the membership back for free.

Go. But go correctly.

Living, Travel, Travel with Kids

20 Frequent Asked Carnival Cruise Questions You’re Probably Already Wondering About

20 Frequent Asked Carnival Cruise Questions You’re Probably Already Wondering About

And yes, I’ve got answers. Let’s get you cruise-ready, without the overwhelm.

Planning your first (or fifteenth) Carnival Cruise? Whether you’re traveling with your partner, your kids, or your crew, there are always questions that pop up before you set sail. And if you’re anything like me, you want real answers from someone who’s been there, not a maze of fine print (but I include links with all that too).

So I rounded up 20 of the most frequently asked cruise questions, from what to pack to how not to lose your Sail & Sign card. Let’s break it all the way down.


Before You Sail: Planning & Prep

1. Do I need a passport to go on a Carnival Cruise?

If your cruise is closed-loop (starts and ends in the same U.S. port), a birth certificate + photo ID works. But a passport is the safest option in case of emergencies.
Carnival’s official ID requirements

2. Are cruise fares refundable if I can’t go?

It depends on how early you cancel. The closer you get to your sail date, the less you’ll get back.
Carnival’s cancellation policy
Pro tip: Consider adding Carnival Vacation Protection for coverage and peace of mind.

3. Is there a minimum age to cruise?

Yes—6 months old for most cruises, 12 months for longer or exotic ones. And anyone under 21 must sail with someone 25 or older in the same room.
Carnival’s minor guest policy

4. Can I bring my water bottle or canteen?

Yep! Bring your reusable bottle and refill it at water stations onboard. Insulated bottles are clutch for port days.

5. Can I bring snacks or drinks onboard?

You can bring sealed snacks and one 12-pack of non-alcoholic drinks (cans or cartons) per person. No glass bottles, no liquor (unless it’s the one bottle of wine per adult).
Carnival beverage policy


Cabins, Cards & Spending

6. How many people can sleep in a stateroom cabin?

Most cabins fit 2–4 people, and some family rooms or suites fit up to 5. For bigger groups, connecting rooms are your best friend.

7. What can I use so I don’t lose my Sail & Sign card?

Get a lanyard with a pouch. It keeps your card handy for everything. Room access, purchases, boarding, and getting on and off the ship at ports of call.

8. Do kids have access to money on the ship?

Yes, through their Sail & Sign card. It works like a debit card onboard.

9. Can I put a spending limit on my child’s Sail & Sign card?

Absolutely! You can cap or block spending for kids and teens right in your Carnival Account or at Guest Services.

10. Are gratuities (tips) included?

They’re automatically added—about $16–$18 per person/day depending on your cabin. You can prepay or adjust onboard.
Gratuities explained


Life Onboard: Food, Fun & Feeling Good

11. What’s included in the cruise fare?

Your room, all meals (excluding specialty dining), drinks (water, tea, lemondade and juice during breakfast), pools, shows, and onboard activities. You’ll pay extra for Wi-Fi, excursions, soda, alcohol drinks, and spa services.

12. Is Wi-Fi available on board?

Yes, but it’s not free!  Carnival has 3 plans: Social, Value, and Premium.
Carnival Wi-Fi packages

13. Is there bottled water on the ship? How much does it cost?

Yes.. You can pre-order a case to your room or while on the ship through room service.

14. Do people get sick on cruises?

Sometimes. Sea sickness or colds are the most common.
Tips to avoid it:
– Book a mid-ship, lower deck room
– Bring Dramamine, Sea-Bands, or ginger chews
– Drink plenty of water, avoid heavy meals prior to sailing, and get fresh air while on board
Carnival’s health guidelines

15. What should I wear on the cruise?

Daytime: swimsuits, casual wear.
Evening: cruise casual with a couple “Cruise Elegant” nights (think cocktail dresses or slacks & button-ups).
Carnival dress code


In Port & On Excursions

16. Are shore excursions worth it?

Yes, if you want more than beach time or walking along the piers. Carnival offers excursions for every vibe. Relaxing, adventurous, foodie approved. You can also wait and book an excursion on your own.  Just don’t miss that ship. No, but seriously, don’t miss the ship.

17. Is cruising good for families or couples?

Both. There’s something for everyone: waterparks and kids’ clubs for families, adults-only spaces and spas for couples. You set the tone and the vibe you want to have while sailing.


Packing & Practical Tips

18. What should I NOT pack for a cruise?

Leave these at home:
– Irons or steamers
– Candles/incense
– Drones
– Surge protectors
– Alcohol (unless it’s your one wine bottle)
Carnival prohibited items

19. How do I stay in touch with my family and friends that are on the ship?

Use the Carnival Hub app to chat for just $5 per person (no Wi-Fi plan needed).
Some families also bring mini walkie-talkies. Great for kids or those who don’t use phones much. Just know the signal works best on open decks.

20. Is cruising worth it?

Absolutely. You unpack once, wake up somewhere new every day, and everything you need is right there on the ship. Whether you want relaxation, nonstop fun, or a little of both, you’re covered.


Final Cruise Tips from Me to You:

– Download the Carnival Hub App before you board
– Bring a power strip (non-surge) for extra outlets
– Take a photo of your passport and ID just in case
– Don’t forget meds, sunscreen, and comfy shoes
– Pack the patience, good vibes, have a blast


Want more cruise tips, destination guides, or family travel ideas?
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Let me know what else you’re curious about—if you’re wondering, someone else probably is too. I got you!