Win a Getaway from CNN, T&L and Infiniti Cars

Posted by: PointsWizard 

Read More in: CNN, sweepstakes, travel

Grand Prize null
7-day/6-night trip for two, valued at $20,000, to your choice of the locations below.
Customized itinerary and activities developed by personal concierge
$3000 American Express gift card
Roundtrip airfare
Luxury accommodations
Airport transfers
Welcome gift

First Prize
4-day/3-night trip for two, valued at $5000/each, to your choice of the locations below.
$1000 American Express gift card
Roundtrip airfare
Luxury accommodations
Airport transfers

Pointswizard.com Spin: Click here to enter Win a Weekend Getaway from CNN, T&L and Infiniti Cars

ends 11:59:00 pm EST September 30, 2009 / From CNN, Travel & Leisure Magazine and Infiniti

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All Blackberry Applications (apps) in one place for you to download

Posted by: PointsWizard 

Read More in: ABC News, CNBC, CNN, ESPN, Facebook, Fidelity Investments, Fox News, baseball, travel, weather

A lot of them are FREE – you get an icon for your desktop

Over 60 choices

Some good ones are ABC News, CNBC, CNN, ESPN, Fidelity Investments, Fox News, Facebook, MLB(your favorite baseball team news), My Space, NY Times, Nobex Radio Companion(what song is being played and live radio feed), USA Today, and 3 different weather services

Pointswizard.com Spin: Click here for Blackberry Applications

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Adding vacation time to a business trip and claiming deductions

Posted by: PointsWizard 

Read More in: Atlanta, CNN, IRS, Las Vegas, Orbitz, PhoCusWright, business trip, deductions, spouse, travel

“If you’ve got to be there for work anyway, why not live it up?

That seems to be the sentiment of a growing number of workers who are extending business trips to squeeze in some vacation time, surveys from Orbitz and PhoCusWright suggest.
The trend could be blamed on the soft economy, rising travel costs and busy schedules affording less time to fit in traditional getaways, said Dean Sivley, senior vice president and chief operating officer for Orbitz for Business and Alliance.

“If my plane ticket is already paid for and if it’s not costing my client any additional money for me to stay a few days … it makes sense to me that I might as well use that,” Christina Whitehead, a meeting and event planner based in Atlanta, Georgia, said of the strategy.

Whitehead is “not a Las Vegas fan,” but when business called for her to be there, she decided to take advantage of the luxurious resort where her employer put her up.
Joined by her husband and two friends, Whitehead spent the weekend after her conference enjoying what the city had to offer outside the casinos. And even though she began picking up the cost of the hotel room once the event ended, the hotel continued to apply the pre-established discounted rate to their room.

This is a common perk of the meetings and convention industry, she said.
Nearly three-quarters of 450 participants in a recent Orbitz for Business/Business Traveler Magazine said they’ve added a leisure component to a business trip within the last year.
In an unrelated PhoCusWright survey released last year, slightly less than half of 500 participants said they’d extended a business trip for leisure purposes over the previous year.
Some companies encourage tacking on leisure stays because they could add up to savings for the business itself, Sivley said.

For instance, if two economy plane tickets cost less than a single business class seat, a company may prefer its employee take the two coach seats and use the extra for a guest, provided that’s within the travel policy, Sivley said. And, many airlines have reintroduced the practice of charging less for minimum stays or Saturday stays. It could work out in companies’ favor, then, for the traveler to stick around through the weekend, Sivley said.

Staying legit with money
It’s important not to press your financial luck on any business trip-turned-vacation, and that means not charging your company for the leisure end of your trip, even though they sent you out
If your spouse and/or family joins you from the beginning of the trip and they have no business function, separate the incremental expenses they accumulate from your own, said Tom Ochsenschlager, vice president of taxation for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Those extra fees may include charges for extra people in a taxi or the price of meals eaten with you.

Claiming Deductions
The last thing you want to come out of your business-trip-turned-vacation is skepticism from the IRS. For those paying for their travel, Tom Ochsenschlager, vice president of taxation at the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants shares these rules on deductions:

•    If your domestic trip is primarily business, both business expenses and the price of getting to and from the destination are deductible.
•    If it’s primarily pleasure, your transportation to and from the destination is not deductible.
•    If you spend less on transportation by staying until Saturday, the IRS has indicated that it will generally consider the extra time spent as a business expense.
•    Meals are only 50 percent deductible, even if they’re business.
•    In most cases, if you bring your spouse or other guests, the costs they incur are not deductible.
•    In most cases of foreign travel, if there’s any pleasure element, a portion of the transportation cost is not deductible, but if the trip is less than a week, it is.
•    Foreign travel transportation cost is also deductible if less than 25 percent is spent in a non-business activity or if the traveler had no substantial control over arranging the trip.”

( via cnn.com/2008/TRAVEL ) by  Debra Alban CNN

Pointswizard.com Spin: Read more about – Adding vacation time to a business trip and claiming deductions

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Expedited Passport Services – RushMyPassport.com

Posted by: PointsWizard 

Read More in: CNN, Forbes, MSNBC, passport, travel

RushMyPassport.com is a leading U.S. Passport expediting company. Featured on Forbes, MSNBC and CNN, They have helped thousands of U.S. citizens get their passports within 24 hours. The process is simple, secure and affordable.

Pointswizard.com Spin:  Click here to get info

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Save On Airline Tickets, Shop On Saturday Morning

Posted by: PointsWizard 

Read More in: CNN, ITA Software, airfare, plane tickets, travel


“Saturday morning is the best time to find a deal on airline tickets, according to CNN Money. Most airfare sales are released to the Airline Traffic Publishing Company on Friday evening, and then forwarded to travel sites and agencies. With 200 million fares in circulation at any given moment, CNN has a novel solution for ferreting out the best deal:

Okay, you’re at your computer in prime travel-shopping time. Where to go first? Not to one of the big three travel-agency sites. You instead want to visit ITA Software (itasoftware.com), a Boston company that developed QPX, a travel search engine that powers other search engines.
Primarily, it’s a business-to-business site with no frills, but you can log on (as a guest) and search fares, even including those of some discount carriers.

Once you enter the usual information, QPX produces a list of flights with prices, departure and arrival times and warnings about inconveniences such as long layovers. You can also search for the lowest fares at any time during a month and for deals if you stay over a weekend.

You can’t purchase a ticket through ITA, but you’ll receive “booking details” that instruct you how to secure the flight you want. ITA Software lets you send an e-mail to your travel agent (a living, breathing one, not a Web site) to request the specific ticket it found. Or you can print out the details and then hunt for the same flight on a travel Web site where you can make a reservation.

To find an even better deal, be flexible like a gymnast. Fiddle with flying times and airports – anything to squeeze extra savings from the airlines.” [Via consumerist.com ]

The Pointswizard.com Spin:
Some very good advice.

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