



30, started at $399 and are $499 until May 31. Its premise was simple: Users can book unlimited flights for fares of 1 cent (plus taxes and fees). The Denver-based low-cost carrier caught my attention last November when the company announced it would be launching the GoWild! All-You-Can-Fly Pass. Yet Frontier Airlines didn’t come across my radar until more recently. I’ve traveled thousands of miles on JetBlue (my ride-or-die), TAP Air Portugal (amazing), Vueling (decent), Ryanair (can you tell I studied abroad in Europe?), French Bee (they lost my bag at Paris Orly for nearly a week) and Spirit (who among us wouldn’t buy a $45 round-trip ticket to see Pitbull play in Nashville?). As a person who takes many last-minute trips, I’m used to flying on budget airlines.
