BOOK ONE-WAY FLIGHTS FOR AS LOW AS $49:Launched today,I Am a Plaything JetBlue's "Spring Into Summer Sale" has flights for as little as $49 each way for travel between April 22 and July 30. The sale ends on April 3 and some date restrictions apply.
Summer flights are notoriously expensive. Since demand is high during summer vacation, it can be a struggle to book flights that fall into an affordable category. But while many of us are still in spring break mode, JetBlue is encouraging us to book summer vacation by offering airfare that feels more like low season pricing.
Between April 1 and April 3, book with the JetBlue Spring Into Summer Sale to score flights as low as $49 each way, with departures between April 22 and July 30. Sale prices offered apply to select flights on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays.
JetBlue knows how to host a sale, offering us some great prices to desirable destinations like the Caribbean, Mexico, and all over the continental U.S. This sale brings the price of flights between New York (LGA) and Fort Lauderdale (FLL) to just $49 or Orlando (MCO) to Montego Bay (MBJ) for $99 each way. New York (JFK) to Atlanta (ATL) start at just $69, which means you could experience peach season in-person this year. For those who live near Los Angeles, snag $124 flights each way from LAX to Fort Lauderdale or fly to New York (JFK) for $129.
SEE ALSO: The Arlo Video Doorbell is still 54% off after the Amazon Big Spring SaleThe JetBlue sale is the perfect reason to get a few friends together and head off for an extra long weekend away, or make that trip home to family you've been meaning to book. JetBlue's route map also works great if you'll be heading off on a summer cruise, since the carrier can get you to major ports like San Diego, Seattle, Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Tampa.
Get excited for spring and summer travel thanks to great prices during the JetBlue Spring into Summer Sale. Be sure to travel on a Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday to get the best price. And you'll want to get vacation sorted out quickly, since the sale ends at 11:59 p.m. ET on April 3.
You can spend too much money on an NFT of Jack Dorsey's first tweetLife insurance customers can get an Apple Watch for $25 — but there's a catchYou can spend too much money on an NFT of Jack Dorsey's first tweetNow's not the time to politicize the roving gangs of giant spiders slowly taking over AmericaWhat happened when Waymo reenacted real fatal car crashes with its autonomous vehicleKFC follows only 11 people on Twitter, for one mindblowing reasonEverything fans want to know about the ping pong scenes from 'The Office'5 living exTikTok announces new features to tackle harassment and bullyingChance the Rapper just shared the most adorable unboxing video featuring his Grammys and daughter97% of young women have been sexually harassed, study findsTesla hikes prices, againGetting all 7.8 billion humans online: What will it take?ASUS' new ROG 5 phone packs an absurd amount of mobile gaming powerGet a COVID vaccine early, but it comes with a side shot of guilt'WandaVision' writer on grief, Fietro, Mephisto, and more: InterviewWhat happens when we get everyone online and close the digital divide?Getting all 7.8 billion humans online: What will it take?Hummer will reveal its electric SUV during the NCAA Final FourHow Florida's already battered coral reefs fared during Hurricane Irma Ashes to Ashes, Eel to Eel by Patrik Svensson Where Does the Sky End? by Nina MacLaughlin What Shape Is the Sky? by Nina MacLaughlin The Art of Distance No. 22 by The Paris Review Leaving It All Behind: A Conversation with Makenna Goodman by Alexander Chee Policing Won’t Solve Our Problems by Alex S. Vitale The Art of Distance No. 18 by The Paris Review The Archive by Melissa Chadburn How Neapolitan Cuisine Took Over the World by Edward White On Translationese by Masatsugu Ono You Have the Right to Remain Silent by Mary Morris A Keeper of Jewels: Remembering Brad Watson by M.O. Walsh Reimagining Black Futures by Sasha Bonét Stalin’s Bodyguard: An Interview with Alex Halberstadt by John Jeremiah Sullivan Staff Picks: Sex Work, Cigarettes, and Systemic Change by The Paris Review Machado’s Catalogue of Failures by Margaret Jull Costa and Robin Patterson Into the Narrow Home Below by Darcey Steinke More Than Just a Lesbian Love Story by Lucy Scholes Staff Picks: Tricksters, Transmogrifications, and Treacherous Beauty by The Paris Review Redux: A Aries, T Taurus, G Gemini by The Paris Review
2.2806s , 10131.59375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【I Am a Plaything】,Pursuit Information Network