The calendar uses a layered pricing system with four levels. Each level builds on the previous one, and they always apply in this fixed order:
| Level | Pricing Type | What it does | Priority |
| 1 | Base prices | Your default price for each trip duration. Applies whenever no other rule is active. | Foundation — always active |
| 2 | Seasonal prices | Adjusts base prices during a defined date range (e.g., high season). | Applies when no holiday price is active |
| 2 | Holiday prices | Adjusts base prices for specific days (e.g., Memorial Day). Overrides seasonal prices. | Takes precedence over seasonal |
| 3 | Discounts | Reduces the final listed price. Applied after all other rules are set. | Always applied last |
Example: You have a base price of $300 for a 4-hour trip. During July (high season), you set a seasonal increase of 20%, bringing it to $360. July 4th is also a holiday where you set a +30% adjustment — since holiday prices override seasonal ones, the July 4th price is $390 (30% above $300, not $360). If you have a 10% early bird discount, it applies on top: $390 × 90% = $351.
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