Frontier Airlines offers its annual GoWild! unlimited travel pass for $299

People looking for ways to save on travel through 2027 have until Friday to get Frontier Airlines GoWild! all-you-can-fly passes for just $299, down from its usual price of $599.

Frontier described the deal as its “biggest” GoWild! deal ever Tuesday. With this pass, travelers get unlimited flights to more than 100 destinations across the U.S., Latin America, the Caribbean and Puerto Rico. Customers can start using it right away, rather than waiting for the typical start period in May, per the Denver, Colo.-based low fare airline.

“We’ve never offered a GoWild! All-You-Can-Fly Annual Pass with so much travel time built in,” said Frontier Chief Commercial Officer Bobby Schroeter. For just $299 half off the regular $599 price – our customers can now get nearly two years of unlimited GoWild! flights on Frontier Airlines.”

Included in the pass is the ability to confirm domestic flights the day before travel and international flights up to 10 days before travel. They can also lock select flights early for a small fee, though some flights are subject to blackout periods. Add on products like bags and seat assignments are not included, but Frontier flyers can earn rewards as they fly.

According to Frontier, the deal allows customers to pay only $0.01 per airline flight over the course of a year. Only passholders are allowed to take advantage of the non-transferrable deal and they must be at least 18 years of age or older to purchase the pass. Those younger than 18 who are residents of the U.S. may be passholders and those under age 13 must be enrolled by their legal guardian. Children under the age of 10 must be accompanied by a companion who is at least 15 years old.

Customers must book through FlyFrontier.com or the Frontier mobile app and it will automatically renew unless purchasers opt out of auto-renewal. More information about the 2026-2027 GoWild! passes is available here.

Frontier’s announcement comes shortly after a U.S. Travel Association report that said “Americans continue to prioritize travel, but broader economic concerns persist” that are impacting the industry. Travel spending in July was up 0.2%, said the association, with “record domestic air passenger volumes and steady U.S. consumer demand,” helping to offset “softness” in international inbound travel.

 NerdWallet reported last month that travel costs were down for at least five weeks in a row this summer. Hotel rates were down, but airfares and car rentals were up, said the personal finance site.

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