GetYourGuide discounts flagged

Condé Nast Traveler promoted GetYourGuide discount codes covering experiences — think skip‑the‑line museum tickets and guided adventures — which could cut costs for busy city itineraries. (x.com)

Condé Nast Traveler on April 14 pointed readers to a GetYourGuide deals page that listed discount codes for tours, attraction tickets, and other bookable experiences. (cntraveler.com) The Condé Nast Traveler page said the offers covered “over 100,000 experiences” and included products such as museum tickets and guided outdoor adventures. GetYourGuide’s own discount page said its current “Secret Deal” gives new users 10% off a first booking after email signup. (cntraveler.com) (getyourguide.com) GetYourGuide’s checkout instructions say travelers have to enter the code on the payment screen before placing the order. The company’s terms also say the 10% code is single-use, requires login, and cannot be applied to “reserve now, pay later” bookings. (getyourguide.com 1) (getyourguide.com 2) GetYourGuide is a Berlin-based travel marketplace that says it now offers more than 150,000 experiences in 12,000 cities and has sold more than 200 million tickets. That scale helps explain why discount-code roundups have become a standard part of travel-planning coverage as travelers try to trim activity costs, not just airfare and hotels. (getyourguide.com) The discounts are aimed at the part of a trip that often gets booked last: timed-entry museum tickets, day tours, and skip-the-line attractions. On crowded city itineraries, those purchases can add up quickly because they are usually sold per person rather than per room. (getyourguide.com) (cntraveler.com) The fine print is narrower than the headline promise. GetYourGuide says discount codes are subject to promotion periods, limited ticket inventory, and supplier availability, and the company says the code is not transferable or redeemable for cash. (getyourguide.com) That leaves travelers with a familiar tradeoff: book early to lock in timed entry and use a code if one applies, or wait and risk higher prices or sold-out slots. Condé Nast Traveler’s post did not announce a new GetYourGuide policy; it surfaced a live deals page tied to a booking platform that already runs rotating promotions. (cntraveler.com) (getyourguide.com)

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