All-inclusive vs half-board
Last updated: 2026-06-17
Board basis can change the total value of the same hotel more than a small room-rate difference. Match it to how you actually travel, not just what sounds convenient on the booking page.
When all-inclusive saves money
All-inclusive tends to pay off in destinations where eating outside the hotel is limited, expensive, or simply not the point of the trip — large resort areas in Turkey, or a private island in the Maldives, for example. If you and your family would naturally eat and drink at the hotel most days anyway, paying for it upfront is usually the cheaper route once you account for restaurant prices, drinks and snacks adding up individually.
When half-board makes more sense
Half-board suits destinations where eating out is part of the experience — city breaks, Spain's mainland resort towns, or any trip where you want the freedom to try local restaurants without feeling you're wasting a pre-paid meal back at the hotel. It also tends to suit shorter trips, where the savings from all-inclusive are smaller relative to the flexibility you give up.
What to check on either board basis
- What's actually included — "all-inclusive" varies wildly between hotels; some include premium drinks and à la carte dining, others stick to a basic house pour and one buffet restaurant
- Meal timing restrictions — some half-board plans fix dinner to a set time or a single restaurant, which can feel restrictive on a longer stay
- Destination eating-out culture — a resort-only location favours all-inclusive; a destination with a strong local food scene often favours half-board
- Drinks policy, since this is usually the biggest practical difference between otherwise similar-looking packages
DealStays verdict
There's no universally "better" board basis — it depends on whether you want predictable cost or flexibility to explore. As a rough rule, resort-led destinations like Turkey and the Maldives tend to suit all-inclusive, while city breaks and destinations with strong local food, like much of mainland Spain, tend to suit half-board.
Related pages
Frequently asked questions
- Is all-inclusive always cheaper than half-board?
- Not always. It depends on how much you'd actually spend eating and drinking out anyway. If you plan to explore local restaurants regularly, half-board can work out cheaper and more flexible than paying upfront for inclusions you won't use.
- Which destinations suit all-inclusive best?
- Resort-led destinations where eating outside the hotel is limited or impractical — Turkey's larger resorts and Maldives island hotels are the clearest examples on this site.
- Which destinations suit half-board best?
- Destinations with a strong local food and restaurant culture, such as Spain's mainland coast or city-break destinations, where the appeal is partly about eating out rather than staying at the hotel.
- What's the biggest difference between all-inclusive and half-board?
- Usually drinks. Half-board typically covers breakfast and dinner only, with drinks and lunch paid separately, while all-inclusive bundles a set range of drinks and often lunch and snacks too — though premium brands are commonly excluded either way.
