Ely sits at the literal end of the road in northeastern Minnesota's Arrowhead region, the last town before the million-acre Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW) and Canada beyond it. This is canoe country - more than 1,000 lakes and 1,200 miles of canoe routes spread across Superior National Forest, with no motors, no roads, and no cell signal once you paddle past the entry points. Ely (population ~3,200) is the outfitting capital of it all: a compact Sheridan Street downtown lined with canoe outfitters, the famous Piragis Northwoods Company, gear shops, and casual cafes. It is also a wildlife-education hub - the International Wolf Center and the North American Bear Center both call Ely home, and the Dorothy Molter Museum preserves the log cabins of the last legal resident of the Boundary Waters, the "Root Beer Lady." Burntside Lake just northwest of town and Shagawa Lake at the town's edge give reunions immediate water access without a wilderness permit, while the Kawishiwi River threads the forest to the east. This is Sigurd Olson country - the wilderness essayist lived and wrote here, and his Listening Point legacy still defines Ely's quiet, paddle-and-portage soul.
Ely is genuinely remote, and that is the appeal. Duluth, the nearest city and the gateway airport (DLH), is about 2 hours south; Minneapolis-St. Paul (MSP) is roughly 4.5 hours, the drive most out-of-state families make. From Duluth you follow Highway 53 north to Highway 1/169 into Ely - a scenic 110-mile run through the Iron Range and boreal forest. Lodging splits between lakeside resorts on Burntside Lake (cabin-cluster resorts ideal for a whole reunion under one ownership), historic lodges, outfitter bunkhouses for groups staging a paddling trip, and a growing stock of Vrbo/Airbnb lake cabins. Summer (mid-June through Labor Day) is the clear peak - 70-80°F days, long northern daylight until nearly 10 PM, and full outfitter and museum programming. Fall brings aspen-and-birch gold in late September. Winter is a season unto itself here: Ely is a dog-sledding capital, with Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge running multi-day mushing trips, plus snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, and ice-fishing. Spring (the "in-between" weeks of late April-May) is the quietest and cheapest, with black-fly season the main caveat. For a reunion that wants real wilderness without roughing it, Ely delivers cabins, water, wolves, bears, and northern stars within walking distance of a hot meal.
Where it is
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Planning a reunion at Ely, Minnesota?
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Things to do (with the family)
Hand-curated. Every entry links to its official source so you can plan without guessing.
International Wolf Center
Ely's flagship attraction - a world-class wolf education center with a resident ambassador wolf pack viewable through observation windows. Daily programs, "What's for Dinner" feedings, and pup-rearing exhibits. The single best rainy-day and multi-gen anchor in town. Open year-round; reduced winter hours.
Official source ↗North American Bear Center
Home to resident black bears in a 2.5-acre natural enclosure, with viewing decks, live den cams, and exhibits on bear biology and the famous Ely research bears. A 1-2 hour visit that pairs naturally with the Wolf Center. Open mid-May through fall.
Official source ↗Dorothy Molter Museum (Root Beer Lady)
The relocated log cabins of Dorothy Molter, the last legal year-round resident of the Boundary Waters, who brewed root beer for paddlers. A charming, genuinely local history stop with homemade root beer for sale. 45-60 minutes; great for all ages.
Official source ↗Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness day paddle
A guided or self-guided day trip into the BWCAW from a nearby entry point (Fall Lake, Lake One, Moose Lake). Day use is permit-required but free in many cases - outfitters handle logistics. The bucket-list Ely experience; even non-paddlers can do a calm half-day loop.
Official source ↗Canoe outfitting at Piragis Northwoods Company
The legendary Sheridan Street outfitter - canoe and kayak rentals, full BWCAW trip outfitting, gear shop, and bookstore. Even a half-day Kevlar-canoe rental for Burntside or Shagawa Lake is a perfect reunion morning. They guide first-timers patiently.
Official source ↗Burntside Lake
A stunning, island-studded clearwater lake just northwest of town - 125 islands, excellent swimming, fishing, and paddling without a wilderness permit. Sigurd Olson's Listening Point cabin sits on its shore. Several cabin resorts ring the lake. The reunion home-base water.
Official source ↗Kawishiwi River paddle
A scenic river route east of Ely threading Superior National Forest, with gentle stretches ideal for family canoeing and small falls and rapids for the adventurous. Outfitters run guided half- and full-day trips. The classic moving-water alternative to lake paddling.
Official source ↗Bear Head Lake State Park
A 4,300-acre state park about 20 minutes southwest of Ely, voted "America's Favorite Park" in 2010. Sandy swimming beach, camping, hiking trails, a fishing pier, and canoe/kayak rentals. The best developed, facility-rich day-park near Ely. $7/day vehicle permit.
Official source ↗Soudan Underground Mine State Park
About 30 minutes southwest near Tower - a tour 2,341 feet underground into Minnesota's oldest iron mine, riding the original cage elevator and electric train. A genuinely unforgettable (and weather-proof) reunion outing. Tours late May through September; reserve ahead.
Official source ↗Ely-Winton History Museum
A compact local museum on the Vermilion Community College campus covering Ely's mining, logging, and wilderness history, including Sigurd Olson and early BWCAW exhibits. An hour well spent for history-minded family members. Open summer season.
Official source ↗Trezona Trail (Miners Lake loop)
A paved/crushed-gravel 4.4-mile loop trail around Miners Lake right in Ely, with interpretive mining-history signs. Flat, stroller- and wheelchair-friendly, great for an easy morning walk or family bike ride. Free; connects to downtown.
Official source ↗Hidden Valley Trails
A network of groomed trails just south of downtown - mountain biking and hiking in summer, cross-country skiing and snowshoeing in winter (lit night-ski trails). The town's go-to free recreation area in any season.
Official source ↗Dog sledding with Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge
Ely is a dog-sledding capital, and Wintergreen runs everything from half-day rides to multi-day expeditions with their kennel of huskies. A signature winter-reunion experience found almost nowhere else in the Lower 48. Reserve well ahead for peak winter weeks.
Official source ↗Superior National Forest scenic drives & waterfalls
The 1.4-million-acre forest surrounds Ely. Drive the Echo Trail (County Road 116) north for boreal scenery, moose-spotting, and access to remote entry points and the Bass Lake Trail loop. Free maps at the Kawishiwi Ranger District office in Ely.
Official source ↗Listening Point & Sigurd Olson legacy walk
Sigurd Olson's Burntside Lake cabin, "Listening Point," is preserved by the Listening Point Foundation, which offers seasonal tours. Pair it with the Sigurd Olson historic home in Ely for fans of his wilderness essays. A quiet, reflective stop for older family members.
Official source ↗Find more things to do for your Ely, Minnesota reunion
The picks above are general. Inside the Reunly app, Rosi tailors local activities, meals, and printables to your actual dates, group size, ages, and budget - and saves them straight to your reunion plan.
Where to hold your reunion near Ely, Minnesota
Outdoor pavilions, county parks, fairgrounds, and event grounds within driving distance - places where your group can actually gather, not just visit.
Burntside Lodge
🏨 Resort / LodgeA historic 1913 National Register lodge with a cluster of lakeside log cabins and a main lodge dining room. The classic Ely whole-reunion-under-one-ownership option on one of the region's most beautiful clearwater lakes.
Reserve / info ↗Grand Ely Lodge Resort & Conference Center
🏨 Resort / LodgeThe largest single-property hotel in Ely, with ~60 rooms, lakeside event and conference space, an indoor pool, and an on-site restaurant. The easiest front-desk-and-banquet option for a large reunion that wants one address.
Reserve / info ↗Bear Head Lake State Park
🏞 State ParkA 4,300-acre Minnesota state park with a group campground, sandy swimming beach, picnic shelters, and a fishing pier. A budget-friendly outdoor gathering spot with developed facilities - ideal for a reunion day or a camping-style group.
Reserve / info ↗Fall Lake Campground (Superior National Forest)
⛺ CampgroundA developed Forest Service campground on Fall Lake with a swimming beach, boat launch, and a BWCAW entry point steps away. Reserve adjacent sites for a camping reunion that wants immediate paddling access without a wilderness permit for the base.
Reserve / info ↗Camp Van Vac
🏨 Resort / LodgeA rustic, beloved Burntside Lake family cabin resort with 16 cabins, a sauna, and a no-frills wilderness vibe. A strong option for a large multi-family reunion that wants the whole group spread across one lakeshore property.
Reserve / info ↗Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge
🏨 Resort / LodgeA lakeside lodge specializing in winter dog-sledding trips, with bunk-style group lodging and guided mushing for reunions wanting Ely's signature winter experience. The unique cold-season reunion anchor in the region.
Reserve / info ↗👥 With Reunly
Save Ely, Minnesota to a real reunion plan
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Good for
- Wilderness-and-water reunions (Boundary Waters paddling)
- Lakeside cabin-resort reunions (Burntside Lake)
- Wildlife-and-education-focused families (wolves & bears)
- Winter dog-sledding and snow-sport reunions
- Multi-generational groups wanting remote-but-comfortable
- Outdoorsy reunions that still want a walkable little downtown
Practical logistics
- Closest Airports
- Duluth International (DLH) 2 hours south - regional flights via Minneapolis. Range Regional (HIB) in Hibbing ~1.5 hours southwest (limited service). Minneapolis-St. Paul International (MSP) 4.5 hours south is the main hub most out-of-state families fly into and drive up from.
- Drive Times
- Duluth 2 hr · Minneapolis-St. Paul 4.5 hr · Hibbing 1.5 hr · Grand Marais 2.5 hr (via the Gunflint side) · Voyageurs / International Falls 2.5 hr · Bemidji 3 hr · Chicago 9 hr.
- Group Lodging
- Burntside Lake cabin resorts (Burntside Lodge - historic 1913 National Register lodge with cabins; Camp Van Vac and other family-cabin resorts - the easy whole-reunion-under-one-roof option). Grand Ely Lodge (resort hotel on Shagawa Lake, ~60 rooms, the largest single-property block in town). Outfitter bunkhouses (Piragis, Voyageur North, and others offer group bunk lodging for paddling parties). Vrbo and Airbnb lake cabins around Burntside, Shagawa, and Fall Lake fill out the 3-6 BR market.
- Rental Companies
- Ely-area cabin rentals run through Vrbo and Airbnb plus local outfits like Ely Vacation Rentals and the resort booking offices on Burntside and Fall Lake. Canoe/kayak/gear rentals: Piragis Northwoods Company, Voyageur North Outfitters, Ely Outfitting Company, and North Country Canoe Outfitters all do full BWCAW trip outfitting and day rentals.
- House Size
- 3-4 BR lake cabins are the standard inventory. Larger 5-6 BR lodges and multi-cabin resort clusters handle the bigger groups - a Burntside resort can absorb 30-60 people across a cabin cluster. Grand Ely Lodge can block ~60 rooms for a single large reunion.
- Peak Season
- Mid-June through Labor Day (summer paddling peak - book cabins 6-9 months ahead, prime BWCAW permit weeks fill fastest). Late September for fall color. Mid-winter (late December-February) for dog-sledding and ice-fishing is a secondary peak with its own dedicated lodging demand.
- Shoulder Season
- Early June (after ice-out, before peak - some black flies, 20-30% off summer rates). Early-to-mid September (warm days, fewer bugs, color starting). Late April-May is the quietest and cheapest, but mud, ice-out timing, and black flies are real trade-offs.
- Restaurants
- Insula Restaurant (modern American, the in-town milestone-dinner anchor, reserve ahead) · Northern Grounds (breakfast/lunch, coffee) · The Boathouse Brewpub & Restaurant (local beer, group-friendly pub food) · Sir G's Italian Restaurant (family-style Italian, a longtime Ely staple) · Ely Steak House (classic supper club) · Front Porch Coffee & Tea · Zaverl's and Britton's Cafe (diner breakfasts). Reserve groups of 10+ a week or two ahead; summer Saturdays fill fast.
- Kid Friendly
- The International Wolf Center, North American Bear Center, Dorothy Molter root-beer tasting, Bear Head Lake State Park beach, Soudan Mine underground tour, and a calm Burntside Lake canoe morning are reliable wins for ages 4-15. Older kids and teens love the Kawishiwi River paddle, an overnight BWCAW trip, and winter dog-sledding. The walkable Trezona Trail suits the youngest and the grandparents.
- Accessibility
- The International Wolf Center, North American Bear Center, and Dorothy Molter Museum are wheelchair accessible. The Trezona Trail is paved/crushed and stroller- and wheelchair-friendly. Bear Head Lake State Park has accessible fishing piers and campsites. Grand Ely Lodge is ADA-compliant. Wilderness paddling and portaging are inherently not accessible; choose lake-only outings and developed parks for mobility-limited members.
- Weather Window
- Summer 70-82°F days, 50-60°F nights (cool northern nights even in July). Spring (May-early June) variable with black flies and possible late ice-out. Fall 50-65°F days, 30-45°F nights - crisp and clear. Winter is genuinely cold: highs often 10-25°F, sub-zero nights common - the real deal for dog-sledding. Pack layers and bug spray for summer; serious cold-weather gear for winter.
- Park Fee
- BWCAW day-use is permit-required but often free; overnight wilderness permits are quota-controlled with a per-trip and per-person fee (reserve via Recreation.gov). Minnesota state parks (Bear Head Lake, Soudan) charge a $7/day or $35/year vehicle permit; Soudan mine tours are a separate paid ticket. The Wolf Center, Bear Center, and Dorothy Molter Museum each charge their own admission.
- Official Site
- https://www.ely.org/
When to go
Mid-June through Labor Day for the summer paddling peak - 70-80°F days, long northern daylight, full outfitter and museum programming (book cabins and BWCAW permits 6-9 months ahead). Late September for aspen-and-birch gold and far fewer bugs. Late December through February for dog-sledding, snowshoeing, and ice-fishing - a completely different but signature Ely reunion. Early June and early September are the value shoulder weeks; late April-May is cheapest but buggiest.
Best for your group size
Small group · 10–25
10-25 fits comfortably in a 3-4 cabin cluster at a Burntside Lake resort, or a couple of adjacent 3-4 BR lake-cabin Vrbos on Shagawa or Fall Lake.
Medium group · 25–60
25-60 should book a full Burntside Lake cabin resort (several cabins under one ownership) or a block of rooms at Grand Ely Lodge plus a few nearby cabins.
Large group · 60+
60+ groups split across a Burntside Lake resort cabin cluster plus Grand Ely Lodge's ~60-room block, or combine multiple lake resorts. Ely's remoteness caps true single-property capacity - large reunions plan a multi-property layout and a central gathering cabin or lodge for meals.
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Sample 5-day Ely reunion (summer)
A starter agenda you can copy into Reunly's Schedule and customize for your group.
Day 1 - Arrival & Settle In
- 11:00 AM grocery run in Virginia/Eveleth on Highway 53 (1 hr south)
- 1:30 PM check in at the Burntside Lake cabin resort
- 3:00 PM unpack, swim off the dock, kids on the beach
- 5:00 PM short paddle or pontoon around the islands
- 7:00 PM cookout at the cabins - reunion welcome dinner
- 9:30 PM campfire and northern stars (no light pollution)
Day 2 - Wolves, Bears & Root Beer
- 8:30 AM breakfast at the cabins
- 9:30 AM International Wolf Center - morning program
- 11:30 AM North American Bear Center
- 1:00 PM lunch at Northern Grounds or The Boathouse Brewpub
- 2:30 PM Dorothy Molter Museum + root-beer tasting
- 4:00 PM Sheridan Street shopping and Piragis bookstore
- 6:30 PM group dinner at Insula (reserve ahead)
Day 3 - Boundary Waters Day Paddle
- 7:30 AM breakfast; outfitter gear pickup at Piragis
- 9:00 AM guided BWCAW day paddle from a nearby entry point
- 12:30 PM shore-lunch on a wilderness lake
- 3:30 PM paddle out, return canoes
- 5:00 PM sauna and swim back at the resort
- 7:00 PM cook night at the cabins
Day 4 - Soudan Mine & Bear Head Lake
- 8:30 AM breakfast at the cabins
- 10:00 AM Soudan Underground Mine State Park tour (30 min drive)
- 12:30 PM lunch in Tower or a picnic
- 2:00 PM Bear Head Lake State Park - swimming beach & easy hike
- 5:00 PM return to Ely
- 7:00 PM dinner at Sir G's or the Ely Steak House
Day 5 - Easy Morning & Goodbyes
- 8:00 AM breakfast at the cabins
- 9:30 AM Trezona Trail walk or one last dock swim
- 11:00 AM pack up and check out
- 12:00 PM goodbye lunch on Sheridan Street
- 1:30 PM drive south toward Duluth or MSP
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Build the Ely, Minnesota reunion schedule in minutes
Drag the sample itinerary above into Reunly's Schedule, add per-event RSVPs, and share one link with the whole family. Rosi (our AI) fills in gaps from your group size and dates.
Reunion organizer tips
Book 6-9 months ahead for summer (mid-June through Labor Day). Burntside Lake cabin resorts and the larger lodges fill their prime July-August weeks first, and BWCAW overnight permits are quota-controlled - reserve those on Recreation.gov the moment your dates and entry point are set.
Pick the right base. A Burntside Lake cabin resort puts the whole family on the water under one ownership - the easiest big-group play. Grand Ely Lodge on Shagawa Lake is the single-property hotel block (~60 rooms) for groups who want a front desk and restaurant. Outfitter bunkhouses suit reunions staging a serious paddling trip.
Lock your wilderness vs. lake decision early. A full BWCAW overnight trip needs permits, portaging fitness, and outfitter logistics - great for an able-bodied subset of the family. For a multi-gen reunion, base everyone on Burntside or Shagawa Lake (no permit needed) and let the adventurous members do a day or overnight wilderness loop.
Use an outfitter even if you're experienced. Piragis, Voyageur North, and Ely Outfitting handle Kevlar canoes, permits, route advice, and food packs. A guided first-timer day paddle removes all the friction for families who have never portaged - well worth the cost on a reunion.
Anchor the wildlife centers on a travel or weather day. The International Wolf Center and North American Bear Center are indoor-friendly, all-ages, and the most reliable rainy-day plan. Pair them with the Dorothy Molter Museum and a root-beer tasting for a complete in-town day.
Plan for no cell service. Once you leave Ely the signal disappears fast, and many cabins have spotty coverage. Download maps offline, set a meeting time and place for any split groups, and treat it as a feature - the digital detox is part of why families come here.
Group dinners a week or two ahead. Insula is the in-town milestone-dinner anchor; The Boathouse Brewpub and Sir G's handle larger family tables. Many reunions cook most nights at the cabins (stock up in Ely or in Virginia/Eveleth on the drive up) and eat out two or three times.
Build in a Soudan Mine or Bear Head Lake day. The Soudan Underground Mine tour (30 min southwest) is a weather-proof crowd-pleaser; Bear Head Lake State Park has the area's best developed swimming beach and picnic facilities. Both make perfect off-the-water reunion days.
Bring the bug strategy in summer. Black flies peak late May-June and mosquitoes follow - head nets, repellent, and long sleeves for evening campfires. By August it eases considerably. This is the one thing first-time Ely visitors underestimate.
Consider a winter reunion. Dog-sledding with Wintergreen, lit night-skiing at Hidden Valley, snowshoeing, and ice-fishing make Ely a rare winter-reunion destination. It's cold (sub-zero nights), but the experience is unforgettable and lodging is easier to book.
Stock the cabins before the last stretch. Ely has a grocery (Zup's) and basics, but selection is limited and prices reflect the remoteness. The bigger stores are in Virginia and Eveleth on Highway 53, about an hour south - many groups do their main grocery run there on the drive in.
Reunly's tools handle the coordination. Use the budget tool to split cabin and outfitter costs by family, the RSVP and guest-list features to confirm who's doing the wilderness paddle vs. staying lakeside, and the polls feature to pick which paid attractions (Wolf Center, Bear Center, Soudan Mine, dog-sledding) to commit the group to.
How Reunly helps you plan it
Reunly is the all-in-one app made for family reunion organizers. Free to start. No credit card. Cancel anytime.
Smart guest list
Drop in any spreadsheet - Rosi (our AI) reads multi-sheet, color-coded family groups, even handwritten exports. RSVP, dietary, T-shirt, paid status all in one row.
Open in Reunly →Public RSVP link
Share one link with the whole family. They RSVP per event (Friday BBQ, Saturday dinner) without making an account. You see live counts.
Open in Reunly →Budget that adds up
Track estimated vs. actual, who paid, who still owes. Auto-creates per-guest fee rows from your registration cost.
Open in Reunly →Day-by-day schedule
Friday welcome BBQ, Saturday photo, Sunday brunch - with location, meal flag, and per-event RSVPs.
Open in Reunly →Name tags + printables
Avery 5160 sheets color-coded by family, programs, welcome packets, packing lists - auto-filled from your data.
Open in Reunly →Rosi the AI helper
Stuck on a reminder email? A budget? A timeline? Click Rosi anywhere in the app - she drafts it from your live data.
Open in Reunly →Plan your Ely, Minnesota reunion with Reunly
Free to start. Build your guest list, share an RSVP link, track payments, and print name tags - no spreadsheets.
Frequently asked
What's the best time of year for a family reunion in Ely?
Mid-June through Labor Day is the summer paddling peak - 70-80°F days, long northern daylight, and full outfitter and museum programming (book cabins and BWCAW permits 6-9 months ahead). Late September brings fall color and far fewer bugs. Late December through February is the signature winter window for dog-sledding and ice-fishing. Early June and early September are the best value weeks.
Do we need a permit to canoe near Ely?
For lakes outside the wilderness - Burntside, Shagawa, Fall Lake - you can paddle freely without a permit. Entering the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness requires a permit: day-use is often free but still regulated, and overnight trips are quota-controlled with per-trip and per-person fees reserved through Recreation.gov. Outfitters handle the permit logistics for you.
How far is Ely from the nearest airport?
Duluth International (DLH) is about 2 hours south with regional flights via Minneapolis. Most out-of-state families fly into Minneapolis-St. Paul (MSP), about 4.5 hours south, and drive up Highway 53. Range Regional (HIB) in Hibbing is closer (1.5 hours) but has very limited service.
Is Ely good for a multi-generational reunion with kids and grandparents?
Yes, if you base everyone on a lake rather than deep in the wilderness. The International Wolf Center, North American Bear Center, Dorothy Molter Museum, Bear Head Lake beach, Soudan Mine tour, and a calm Burntside Lake paddle suit all ages. The flat, paved Trezona Trail works for the youngest and oldest. Let the able-bodied members do the wilderness paddling while the base camp stays lakeside.
How big a place do we need for 30 people in Ely?
A full Burntside Lake cabin resort - several cabins under one ownership - is the easiest fit for 30, often with a central lodge for meals. Alternatively, block a set of rooms at Grand Ely Lodge plus a couple of nearby lake cabins. Ely's inventory skews toward 3-4 BR cabins, so 30+ usually means a multi-cabin cluster rather than one big house.
What is there to do in Ely if it rains?
The International Wolf Center and North American Bear Center are indoor-friendly and all-ages. The Soudan Underground Mine tour is literally weather-proof (2,341 feet underground). The Dorothy Molter Museum and Ely-Winton History Museum round out an indoor day, and Sheridan Street has shops, the Piragis bookstore, and cozy cafes.
How much does an Ely reunion cost per family?
Summer cabin resorts run roughly $200-400/night per cabin; a week for a family of four typically lands around $2,000-3,500 including outfitting and admissions. Outfitter-guided BWCAW day trips add $75-150 per person. Off-peak weeks (early June, September, winter) run 20-30% lower. Cooking at the cabins keeps food costs well below a restaurant-heavy trip.
Can we do the Boundary Waters with young kids?
Yes, on a calm, guided day trip from a nearby entry point - many families do a half-day loop with kids aged 6 and up in stable Kevlar canoes. Multi-day wilderness trips with portaging are better suited to older kids and teens. The safest plan is a lake-based reunion with an outfitter-guided day paddle that everyone can opt into.
Other reunion-friendly spots nearby
Helpful planning guides
The complete family reunion checklist
12-month, 6-month, and day-of checklists organizers actually use.
Read the guide →Family reunion budget guide
How to estimate, track, and split costs without spreadsheets.
Read the guide →Family reunion on a $2,500 budget
A real budget breakdown for a destination reunion under $2.5K.
Read the guide →


