Roadtrip Recession: Survey Reveals the Best Family-Friendly Budget Road Trips in the U.S. for Summer 2026
June 2, 2026
The Great American Road Trip used to be considered the cheaper option for family vacations. You would only need to pack up the car, fill up the cooler, and head off.
While the biggest expense would be the hotel and motel rooms along the way, the basic premise was very simple: to drive with freedom.
This summer, that freedom feels a little more conditional.
According to our survey of over 3,000 families, gas prices are causing them to think twice before committing to the kind of long, meandering road trip that once defined the season.
Table of Contents
Key Findings
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Almost 2 in 3 families are rethinking summer road trip plans because of gas prices.
That does not mean everyone is cancelling, but it does suggest the old "we'll figure it out as we go" approach has been replaced by a more cautious one.
Families are doing the math before they leave the driveway.
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Over 2 in 3 families are more likely to take a shorter, in-state road trip this summer.
They still want the change of scenery. However, they also want it without the financial sting of crossing five states to get there.
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"Big scenery, manageable distance" defines the top-ranked road trips.
Tucson to the Grand Canyon via Sedona came in first place, followed by Nashville to Gatlinburg via Chattanooga, and San Francisco to Eureka via Mendocino and the Avenue of the Giants.
These are proper trips with drama, views, and a real sense of arrival. They just do not require families to build the entire summer budget around fuel.
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Gas dominates road trip pain points, well ahead of hotels and food.
When families were asked what feels most expensive right now, 67% said gas. Hotels came in much lower at 17%, followed by food at 8%, attractions at 6%, and car maintenance at 3%.
You can downgrade a hotel, skip a paid attraction, or pack lunch in a cooler. Gas is harder to negotiate with.
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1 in 5 families say they would cut the trip itself, not just the extras.
25% said souvenirs would be the first thing to go from the budget, which is hardly shocking. But 19% said they would cut the trip itself.
That suggests that for a meaningful share of families, this is not just about spending less on vacation. It is about whether the vacation happens at all.
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Nearly half of families would invite others along to share gas costs.
47% said high gas prices would make them more likely to invite another family or relatives along to split costs. On paper that is practical. In reality, it turns the family road trip into a logistical challenge with more people, more bags, more opinions, and more bathroom stops.
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86% believe the classic long-distance American road trip is becoming less affordable.
That is a big number, and it taps into something larger than this summer's pump prices.
The road trip has always been one of America's more democratic vacations. You did not need airport lounges or resort wristbands. If that starts to feel out of reach, it changes the meaning of the tradition.
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The most common plan is "same trip, tighter budget."
Chosen by 26% of respondents, this is the most common way families are approaching the summer. They are packing differently, choosing fewer paid stops, staying closer to home, and trying to make the same idea work under less generous conditions.
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National parks and outdoor routes are well-suited to budget travelers.
Families may be cutting extras, but they still want to visit special places.
Destinations like the Grand Canyon, Acadia, Yellowstone, Glacier, Olympic, Badlands, New River Gorge, and Great Sand Dunes deliver the sense of a real vacation without needing every hour to be monetized.
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The average breaking point is about $1.05 more per gallon.
Families said gas prices would need to rise by about $1.05 per gallon before they cancelled a planned road trip altogether. This means that if prices reach around $5.45 per gallon, the average family would cancel and stay home.
Final Thoughts
- The big takeaway is not that families have fallen out of love with road trips. They clearly have not. But the fantasy has changed a bit.
- The endless highway, the extra detour, the spontaneous overnight stop are all harder to justify when every mile feels priced in.
- Vacations this summer may be shorter, but not less meaningful. It is just a question of checking the fuel total before it gets too carried away.
Survey Methodology
This study is based on a survey of 3,002 U.S. families conducted in May 2026.
Respondents were asked to identify the best family-friendly budget road trips within their own state, taking into account factors such as affordability, scenery, family activities, driving distance, and overall summer appeal.
Respondents were also asked how much gas prices would have to rise before they'd consider cancelling their travel plans, plus some additional questions about affordability.
The survey was carried out online using a geographically representative panel, balanced by age, gender, household income, and region.
Results were weighted where necessary to reflect U.S. population benchmarks.
Data quality checks included bot detection, geo-verification, speeding checks, and manual review of responses.
Roadtrip Recession Results Table
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