A Kentucky woman paid just $186 for a mystery vacation package on Groupon and had no idea where she was going until a travel agent called days later. The TikTok video she posted about the experience has since racked up over 757,000 views.
The TikToker, known as Rou (@roofayduh), filmed herself and a friend sitting with the receipt for what Groupon calls its “Mystery Getaway” package. As BroBible reported, the deal covers roundtrip flights and a hotel stay, with buyers only learning their destination about 72 hours after purchase. “We’re so nervous because we don’t know if it’s a scam or not,” Rou said in the video. “A vacation for $186 just sounds insane.”
How the Groupon mystery getaway actually works
The package, currently listed on Groupon for travel through December 2026, requires buyers to purchase a minimum of two vouchers since pricing is based on two people sharing a room. Solo travelers can still book, but they pay a $150 surcharge on top. Destinations are assigned across three tiers (Gold, Silver, and Bronze), and the trip length varies between two, four, or seven nights depending on dates and departure airport.
According to The Krazy Coupon Lady, the package advertises over 50 possible destinations spanning domestic and international locations, from Hawaii and Orlando to international spots like Europe and Asia. What buyers won’t know going in is which tier they’ll land in or exactly when their flights will depart.
The reveal was a letdown
When the travel agent called Rou 72 hours later as promised, the first destination on the table was Atlanta. She turned it down because she and her friend had already visited. The agent then offered Fort Lauderdale and Orlando. She picked Orlando.
“It’s still really fun, and I am excited,” she said in a follow-up video, “but I was hoping for something different. I was hoping for like Utah. I was hoping for Cali.”
There were also extra costs she did not see coming. The agent informed her of a $20 per night hotel fee and warned that some airport locations carry an additional “airport fee.” She said her trip is planned for mid-July.
People online are split on whether it’s worth it
The TikTok comment section and communities like Reddit’s r/Frugal tell very different stories about the experience. Some travelers said they came away impressed, while others felt burned by hidden costs and limitations.
On the positive side, one Reddit commenter described a 10-day trip to Turkey with flights, hotel, and multiple tours included, adding that they got upgraded at both hotels during the off-season. A TikTok viewer echoed a similar experience with Atlanta, saying they had a blast despite the destination being a slight disappointment.
But not everyone is walking away happy. One user on Reddit recalled booking the package for a honeymoon and ending up at a resort so isolated that food options outside the property were nearly impossible to find. “Once we got to the resort the food was ungodly expensive,” they wrote, adding that taxes and tips pushed the total well beyond the sticker price.
Another TikTok commenter was even blunter: “Omg. This was such a nightmare. I’m all about going on a vacation at any destination. This was so horrible. Check your flights and the fine print. Do not recommend.”
The divide seems to come down to flexibility. Travelers who are open about timing, destinations, and a few surprise fees tend to find value in the deal. Those expecting a curated experience for under $200 are more often let down. Rou herself had hoped for something further afield and ended up with a trip she could have booked directly for a comparable price.
It is also not uncommon for women to pull bold moves to get better deals while traveling, and this mystery vacation trend fits right into that pattern of going big to save money. But as Rou’s experience shows, the gamble does not always pay off the way you imagine. A woman in Hawaii recently faced a similar moment of sticker shock when an unexpected “kitchen appreciation fee” showed up on her restaurant bill, a reminder that travel surprises are not always the fun kind.




