Vacation Loan — Is Borrowing for a Holiday Ever Worth It?

Should you take a loan to finance your holiday? Analysis of vacation loan costs, alternatives, and when borrowing for travel makes financial sense.

7 min czytania

Vacation Loan — Is Borrowing for a Holiday Ever Worth It?

Every spring, Polish banks and tour operators push "vacation loans" — quick personal loans of 3,000-15,000 PLN designed to finance summer holidays. Itaka, Rainbow, and TUI all offer instalment payment plans. Banks advertise "holiday cash" with simplified applications.

The marketing is seductive: "Don't wait — you deserve a break now." But is borrowing for a holiday financially sound?

In almost all cases, no. Here is why, with the numbers.

What Vacation Loans Actually Cost

Bank personal loans

A typical vacation loan from a Polish bank in 2026:

Loan amount Interest rate (RRSO) Term Monthly payment Total repaid Total interest paid
5,000 PLN 12.5% 12 months 445 PLN 5,340 PLN 340 PLN
5,000 PLN 12.5% 24 months 236 PLN 5,664 PLN 664 PLN
10,000 PLN 11.8% 24 months 468 PLN 11,232 PLN 1,232 PLN
10,000 PLN 11.8% 36 months 330 PLN 11,880 PLN 1,880 PLN

That 5,000 PLN holiday to Turkey actually costs 5,340-5,664 PLN when you add interest. Not catastrophic — but you are paying a premium for the privilege of not waiting.

Tour operator instalments

Itaka and Rainbow offer "pay in 10 instalments" or "0% interest" plans. Read the fine print:

  • "0% interest" usually means the tour operator absorbs the cost — but the package price is 5-10% higher than the cash price. You are paying interest, just not visibly.
  • Instalment plans via Santander or BNP Paribas (embedded in the booking process) charge 9-14% RRSO.
  • Late payment penalties are steep: 30-50 PLN per missed instalment plus the bank's statutory interest.

Credit card financing

The worst option. Polish credit cards charge 18-22% interest on unpaid balances. A 5,000 PLN holiday carried on a credit card for 12 months costs 900-1,100 PLN in interest — more than double a bank loan.

The Fundamental Problem

A holiday is a consumable expense. Unlike a car (which provides transport) or education (which increases earning potential), a holiday provides memories but zero financial return. Borrowing for consumables means you are reducing your future spending power to increase your present spending — the exact opposite of wealth building.

The debt hangover

The most insidious effect of a vacation loan is psychological. You return from holiday relaxed and happy, but within 2-3 months the monthly loan payments become a source of stress. The relaxation benefit is gone; the debt remains for 12-36 months.

Research from the UK's Money and Mental Health Policy Institute found that 35% of people who borrowed for holidays regretted the decision within six months.

When It Might Be Justified

There are narrow circumstances where borrowing for a holiday is defensible:

Medical necessity

If a doctor recommends rest and climate change for health reasons (respiratory issues, burnout, recovery), and your savings are insufficient, a short-term loan for a modest trip can be a legitimate health investment.

Life milestone

A significant family event — grandparents' 50th anniversary trip, a child's first holiday abroad — has value beyond the financial. Borrowing 3,000-5,000 PLN for a once-in-a-generation occasion is different from borrowing for an annual beach trip.

0% instalment with cash-price matching

If you find a genuine 0% instalment deal where the package price is identical to the cash price, you are effectively getting free financing. This is rare but exists during early-booking promotions. In this case, you can keep your savings invested while paying the instalments.

Better Alternatives

The holiday sinking fund

Start saving 8-12 months before your trip. For a 6,000 PLN holiday:

  • 12 months x 500 PLN = 6,000 PLN
  • 10 months x 600 PLN = 6,000 PLN
  • 8 months x 750 PLN = 6,000 PLN

Put the money in a high-interest savings account (4-5% in 2026 Poland) and earn 100-200 PLN in interest instead of paying 400-700 PLN.

Downgrade the trip, not your finances

A week at a 3-star in Side (Turkey) costs 2,500-3,500 PLN per person. A week at a 5-star in Belek costs 5,000-7,000 PLN. The beach is the same. The weather is the same. The 3-star buffet is perfectly good. Save the difference.

Choose a cheaper destination

If your budget is 3,000 PLN per person without a loan:

  • Bulgaria instead of Greece saves 1,000-2,000 PLN
  • Polish Baltic coast instead of Croatia saves 1,500-3,000 PLN
  • Camping instead of hotels saves 40-60%

Book last-minute

If you can be flexible on dates and destination, last-minute all-inclusive deals (booked 1-2 weeks before departure) can be 30-50% cheaper than standard prices.

The Maths in Favour of Saving

If you save 500 PLN per month instead of paying a 500 PLN loan instalment:

  • Saving: After 12 months you have 6,000 PLN + ~200 PLN interest = 6,200 PLN for next year's holiday. Zero stress.
  • Borrowing: After 12 months you have paid 6,000 PLN + ~400 PLN interest = 6,400 PLN for this year's holiday. Plus 12 months of payment stress.

The saver pays 200 PLN less AND has a year of financial peace. Over 5 years of annual holidays, the difference compounds to 3,000-5,000 PLN.

How Freenance Helps

Building a holiday sinking fund is easier when you can see it growing. Freenance lets you create dedicated savings goals and track your monthly contributions. Watching your "Summer 2027" fund grow from 500 PLN to 6,000 PLN over 12 months is far more satisfying than watching a loan balance shrink.

The Bottom Line

Vacation loans are a bad deal in almost every scenario. The interest you pay (300-1,900 PLN) would buy you extra excursions, better meals, or an extra trip. Save in advance, travel within your means, and enjoy the holiday without the debt hangover.

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