How do you plan a bachelorette or bachelor party trip?
Settle the guest list, budget, and dates first, because a bachelorette or bachelor trip lives or dies on those three before any activity gets booked. Budgets vary widely across a friend group, so agree on a comfortable number early and make the splurge activities optional rather than mandatory. Keep the guest of honor's must-haves central and put everything else to a vote so the planning does not fall on one maid of honor or best man. In LFG you can run polls on the destination and activities, track the shared budget, and split costs fairly so the organizer is not fronting the whole weekend.
How do you plan a group ski trip?
Lock dates and lodging early, since ski weekends cluster around holidays and the good slope-side rentals book out fast. Account for a mix of abilities — plan for different runs, lesson times, and a clear meet-up point and time so the group can split during the day and regroup after. Map the drive from your rental to the lifts and to dinner so transport and timing are realistic, not optimistic. LFG's day-by-day itinerary handles meet-up times and locations, its interactive map shows routes and travel times between your stops, and expense splitting keeps the rental, lift tickets, and group meals squared away.
How do you plan a family reunion trip?
Plan around the widest range of ages and needs, because a reunion spans toddlers to grandparents and a one-size itinerary will not fit. Poll the family on dates far in advance — coordinating many households is the slowest step — and pick a destination with options for every energy level. Keep the plan somewhere every relative can see, including the less tech-savvy ones, so information does not get stuck in one cousin's phone. LFG gives the whole family one shared trip page with the itinerary and decisions in plain view, plus a shareable link so even relatives who do not use the app can follow the plan.
How do you plan a guys' or girls' weekend getaway?
Keep a weekend getaway tight: pick one destination, a simple itinerary, and a clear split of costs so two or three days are not eaten by logistics. Because the window is short, agree on the dates that work for the most people first and build everything else around them. Decide a rough budget so nobody is surprised by the bill, and keep the plan loose enough to leave room for spontaneity. LFG's availability view surfaces the dates that work for the most people, polls settle the small decisions quickly, and expense splitting handles the tab so the weekend stays low-effort.
How do you plan a destination birthday trip?
Center the plan on what the birthday person actually wants, then handle the group logistics around that anchor. Get a headcount and dates early so you can size lodging and reservations, and be explicit about who is paying for what — especially whether the group is covering the guest of honor. Make the celebration moments deliberate while leaving the rest of the trip relaxed. In LFG you can build the day-by-day plan, run a poll on the optional activities, and use expense splitting to handle a group gift or a covered dinner without awkward money conversations mid-trip.
How do you plan a group beach or lake-house trip?
Get the house and the headcount locked first, because the rental drives the budget, the dates, and how you split costs for the whole trip. Sort sleeping arrangements upfront to head off the bedroom scramble on arrival, and plan a simple food approach — assigned meal nights or a shared grocery run beats deciding three times a day. Keep activities optional and weather-flexible. LFG lets you log the house as a shared expense and split it fairly, build a loose day-by-day plan, and keep the group chat and decisions attached to the trip instead of lost in a text thread.