Prices for flights to eclipse-viewing hot spots have spiraled out of control

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A flight to Nashville, Tennessee, in mid-August wouldn't usually break the bank.

But since the music mecca is in a prime location to view the solar eclipse due to take place on Monday, August 21, it's moved to the top of the list for many travelers.

According to Google Flights, if you were to book a round-trip flight leaving Friday and returning to New York City Tuesday, the ticket would cost you well over $1,000. 

That's even if you leave at less convenient times, like 6 a.m. Sure, booking a flight now is pretty last minute, but for comparison, similar flights leaving after the eclipse next week are currently less than half the price. 

Round-trip flights to other viewing hot spots like Kansas City, Missouri, and Lincoln, Nebraska, are similarly expensive, all over $1,000. In almost all cases, shifting your flight a day or two outside of the Friday to Tuesday range can shave hundreds to thousands off the ticket cost. It's clear why travelers are flocking there. 

total solar eclipse viewing safety sunglasses reuters cathal mcnaughton RTR4U5FQCathal McNaughton/Reuters

Predictably, the cities where prices have risen the most are already hot tourist destinations, like Nashville and Charleston, South Carolina. Hotel rooms in some of these destinations have been booked for years, according to CNBC, and many cities have planned events in the days leading up to the eclipse. 

The National Centers for Environmental Information listed some of the major cities that will get to see a total eclipse, what time they'll see it, and how cloudy that day has been in the past.cloudiness total solar eclipseNOAA.gov

NOW WATCH: NASA's most accurate map of where Americans can witness the rare total solar eclipse this year

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