First-time traveler - what plane ticket should I get? [closed]












3















It is my first time travelling by plane so I would like to ask, what type of plane ticket is better, and should I use the same ticket to get home?










share|improve this question















closed as unclear what you're asking by Ali Awan, Robert Columbia, Giorgio, bytebuster, Aleks G Mar 8 at 16:23


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 8





    Welcome to Travel.SE. Please tell us more about what makes a plane "better" for you (price? comfort?) and where you're flying to/from.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:55






  • 12





    Also, for the upcoming "too broad/close" voters, I think this site needs a Flying 101 Q&A (restricted vs flexible tickets, direct vs nonstop, one-way vs return, etc) and this might be a good opportunity to create it.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:56











  • By "do we use the same plane ticket to get home", I'm assuming you mean booking a round trip with the same/allied airlines. They're still distinct tickets - one to go and one to come back, just booked together. And you do need them both.

    – insanity
    Mar 8 at 6:47






  • 4





    @insanity The term "ticket" is a bit overloaded. If you book with Ryanair, then booking a round trip with them will indeed lead to two different tickets. But if you book with, say, United airlines, you will actually get one (e-)ticket for the round-trip if you book in the usual way. This, for instance, makes a difference if you miss a so-called leg of your trip, as the rest of the ticket will normally be cancelled in such a case.

    – DCTLib
    Mar 8 at 7:02








  • 19





    "First time traveler" - wow, you are first one to travel through time? ;-)

    – rexkogitans
    Mar 8 at 10:20
















3















It is my first time travelling by plane so I would like to ask, what type of plane ticket is better, and should I use the same ticket to get home?










share|improve this question















closed as unclear what you're asking by Ali Awan, Robert Columbia, Giorgio, bytebuster, Aleks G Mar 8 at 16:23


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 8





    Welcome to Travel.SE. Please tell us more about what makes a plane "better" for you (price? comfort?) and where you're flying to/from.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:55






  • 12





    Also, for the upcoming "too broad/close" voters, I think this site needs a Flying 101 Q&A (restricted vs flexible tickets, direct vs nonstop, one-way vs return, etc) and this might be a good opportunity to create it.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:56











  • By "do we use the same plane ticket to get home", I'm assuming you mean booking a round trip with the same/allied airlines. They're still distinct tickets - one to go and one to come back, just booked together. And you do need them both.

    – insanity
    Mar 8 at 6:47






  • 4





    @insanity The term "ticket" is a bit overloaded. If you book with Ryanair, then booking a round trip with them will indeed lead to two different tickets. But if you book with, say, United airlines, you will actually get one (e-)ticket for the round-trip if you book in the usual way. This, for instance, makes a difference if you miss a so-called leg of your trip, as the rest of the ticket will normally be cancelled in such a case.

    – DCTLib
    Mar 8 at 7:02








  • 19





    "First time traveler" - wow, you are first one to travel through time? ;-)

    – rexkogitans
    Mar 8 at 10:20














3












3








3








It is my first time travelling by plane so I would like to ask, what type of plane ticket is better, and should I use the same ticket to get home?










share|improve this question
















It is my first time travelling by plane so I would like to ask, what type of plane ticket is better, and should I use the same ticket to get home?







air-travel tickets






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 8 at 16:22









binaryfunt

27419




27419










asked Mar 8 at 5:44









MikiMiki

252




252




closed as unclear what you're asking by Ali Awan, Robert Columbia, Giorgio, bytebuster, Aleks G Mar 8 at 16:23


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









closed as unclear what you're asking by Ali Awan, Robert Columbia, Giorgio, bytebuster, Aleks G Mar 8 at 16:23


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 8





    Welcome to Travel.SE. Please tell us more about what makes a plane "better" for you (price? comfort?) and where you're flying to/from.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:55






  • 12





    Also, for the upcoming "too broad/close" voters, I think this site needs a Flying 101 Q&A (restricted vs flexible tickets, direct vs nonstop, one-way vs return, etc) and this might be a good opportunity to create it.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:56











  • By "do we use the same plane ticket to get home", I'm assuming you mean booking a round trip with the same/allied airlines. They're still distinct tickets - one to go and one to come back, just booked together. And you do need them both.

    – insanity
    Mar 8 at 6:47






  • 4





    @insanity The term "ticket" is a bit overloaded. If you book with Ryanair, then booking a round trip with them will indeed lead to two different tickets. But if you book with, say, United airlines, you will actually get one (e-)ticket for the round-trip if you book in the usual way. This, for instance, makes a difference if you miss a so-called leg of your trip, as the rest of the ticket will normally be cancelled in such a case.

    – DCTLib
    Mar 8 at 7:02








  • 19





    "First time traveler" - wow, you are first one to travel through time? ;-)

    – rexkogitans
    Mar 8 at 10:20














  • 8





    Welcome to Travel.SE. Please tell us more about what makes a plane "better" for you (price? comfort?) and where you're flying to/from.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:55






  • 12





    Also, for the upcoming "too broad/close" voters, I think this site needs a Flying 101 Q&A (restricted vs flexible tickets, direct vs nonstop, one-way vs return, etc) and this might be a good opportunity to create it.

    – jpatokal
    Mar 8 at 5:56











  • By "do we use the same plane ticket to get home", I'm assuming you mean booking a round trip with the same/allied airlines. They're still distinct tickets - one to go and one to come back, just booked together. And you do need them both.

    – insanity
    Mar 8 at 6:47






  • 4





    @insanity The term "ticket" is a bit overloaded. If you book with Ryanair, then booking a round trip with them will indeed lead to two different tickets. But if you book with, say, United airlines, you will actually get one (e-)ticket for the round-trip if you book in the usual way. This, for instance, makes a difference if you miss a so-called leg of your trip, as the rest of the ticket will normally be cancelled in such a case.

    – DCTLib
    Mar 8 at 7:02








  • 19





    "First time traveler" - wow, you are first one to travel through time? ;-)

    – rexkogitans
    Mar 8 at 10:20








8




8





Welcome to Travel.SE. Please tell us more about what makes a plane "better" for you (price? comfort?) and where you're flying to/from.

– jpatokal
Mar 8 at 5:55





Welcome to Travel.SE. Please tell us more about what makes a plane "better" for you (price? comfort?) and where you're flying to/from.

– jpatokal
Mar 8 at 5:55




12




12





Also, for the upcoming "too broad/close" voters, I think this site needs a Flying 101 Q&A (restricted vs flexible tickets, direct vs nonstop, one-way vs return, etc) and this might be a good opportunity to create it.

– jpatokal
Mar 8 at 5:56





Also, for the upcoming "too broad/close" voters, I think this site needs a Flying 101 Q&A (restricted vs flexible tickets, direct vs nonstop, one-way vs return, etc) and this might be a good opportunity to create it.

– jpatokal
Mar 8 at 5:56













By "do we use the same plane ticket to get home", I'm assuming you mean booking a round trip with the same/allied airlines. They're still distinct tickets - one to go and one to come back, just booked together. And you do need them both.

– insanity
Mar 8 at 6:47





By "do we use the same plane ticket to get home", I'm assuming you mean booking a round trip with the same/allied airlines. They're still distinct tickets - one to go and one to come back, just booked together. And you do need them both.

– insanity
Mar 8 at 6:47




4




4





@insanity The term "ticket" is a bit overloaded. If you book with Ryanair, then booking a round trip with them will indeed lead to two different tickets. But if you book with, say, United airlines, you will actually get one (e-)ticket for the round-trip if you book in the usual way. This, for instance, makes a difference if you miss a so-called leg of your trip, as the rest of the ticket will normally be cancelled in such a case.

– DCTLib
Mar 8 at 7:02







@insanity The term "ticket" is a bit overloaded. If you book with Ryanair, then booking a round trip with them will indeed lead to two different tickets. But if you book with, say, United airlines, you will actually get one (e-)ticket for the round-trip if you book in the usual way. This, for instance, makes a difference if you miss a so-called leg of your trip, as the rest of the ticket will normally be cancelled in such a case.

– DCTLib
Mar 8 at 7:02






19




19





"First time traveler" - wow, you are first one to travel through time? ;-)

– rexkogitans
Mar 8 at 10:20





"First time traveler" - wow, you are first one to travel through time? ;-)

– rexkogitans
Mar 8 at 10:20










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















10














When comparing two or more plane tickets, you use such criteria as price, number of stops (layovers/transits), safety history, customer service reputation, on time performance of the airline, airport flying out of and how close it is to your house and destination, quality of their frequent flyer program, penalty for rebooking and re-pricing, brand name, etc.



Typically you want lower price, fewer stops, good customer service, low penalty for rebooking, generous frequent flyer program, excellent safety, etc. You get the idea.



Everyone will have their own mental utility function giving different weights to the various criteria depending on importance to them, just like when deciding which brand of car to purchase. The rational goal will be aim at the combination that gives you the highest satisfaction U (utility).



U=f(x1, x2,...xn)



I for example will never fly Aeroflot even if I was offered first class tickets for $10 because the anecdotal horror stories I have heard about them (likely not true) from my youth have mentally traumatized me.




do we use the same plane ticket to get home?




Yes you usually use the same plane ticket to your destination and back. Probably 80% (it is falling with the advent of budget airlines and budget fares) of tickets purchased are return/round-trip tickets.



Why it’s sometimes better to book two one-way airplane tickets instead of one round-trip flight




The percentage of one-way tickets purchased has risen steadily since
2014, and a report by the New York Times found that 44% of airline
travelers booked a one-way ticket instead of a round-trip ticket




Return tickets are usually cheaper than two one way tickets and sometimes even cheaper than a single one way ticket. The reasons for that will be left out at this time.






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    Re Aeroflot - while plenty of true horror stories happened during the USSR and in the time shortly after that, they have now (statistically speaking) improved their safety substantially, and aren't much of a threat any longer. It's smaller Russian airlines you have to worry about, many of those are still pretty unsafe due to things like shortages of well-trained Russian pilots.

    – Muzer
    Mar 8 at 9:47



















1














Which one is better depends on what is important to you so nobody else can tell you. However there are a few things to think about that might help you decide. The big difference between multiple individual tickets and a return (or routed) ticket is who is responsible for breaks in the journey. A few years ago my daughter came back from Australia to Ireland for Christmas. Bad weather meant her return flight from Dublin to London was delayed until after her onward flight from London to Australia had taken off. Because she had bought separate tickets, she was considered as a no-show and had to arrange her own alternatives. Had she bought a through ticket, the airline would have been responsible for getting her home. Whether that matters to you depends on you and your journey.



This might seem obvious, but planes only fly from airport to airport, so think about how you intend to get to and from the airport at both ends. That will often help you decide which airport you actually want to fly to. RaynAir are renowned for getting you close but not necessarily close enough to your destination. Stanstead to London will cost you a few hours and quite a few quid. As will Girona to Barcelona, Beauvais to Paris, or Charleroi to Brussels. If you know what to expect before hand and have planned for it, then it isn't a problem, but if you didn't know, it could turn into a nasty surprise.



Each time you have to change on a journey adds stress to the journey, so while you can often save a little money taking the round-about route, only you can decide if the extra stress is worth the savings. When I was younger, I used to love taking weird and wonderful routes because they often brought me to exciting places I had never seen before, now-days I prefer fly as near direct as possible even if it means changing the dates I travel.



How flexible are you? The more rigid your plans the less choice you will have and (usually) the higher price you will have to pay. Ask yourself if you really need to be in a given place at the same time everybody else wants to be there. Late May on the Cote d'Azure is magical, unfortunately you have to share it with the Cannes film festival so everywhere is overpriced and booked out. The first week of June is just as magical but without the crowds.



Are you happy to organise every thing for yourself, or are you willing (and able) to pay for somebody else (a travel agent) to look after all the details for you. For your first major journey, I would recommend a travel agent. They can do so much more then just book your flights, including most of the things you haven't thought of yet. I would suggest you do a little preparation first. Know where you want to go and when. Know what you would like to do when you get there (tickets booked in advance are usually much cheaper). And know what is important to you and what you can be flexible with. Listen to their advice but make your own decisions. Finally, have fun.






share|improve this answer






























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    10














    When comparing two or more plane tickets, you use such criteria as price, number of stops (layovers/transits), safety history, customer service reputation, on time performance of the airline, airport flying out of and how close it is to your house and destination, quality of their frequent flyer program, penalty for rebooking and re-pricing, brand name, etc.



    Typically you want lower price, fewer stops, good customer service, low penalty for rebooking, generous frequent flyer program, excellent safety, etc. You get the idea.



    Everyone will have their own mental utility function giving different weights to the various criteria depending on importance to them, just like when deciding which brand of car to purchase. The rational goal will be aim at the combination that gives you the highest satisfaction U (utility).



    U=f(x1, x2,...xn)



    I for example will never fly Aeroflot even if I was offered first class tickets for $10 because the anecdotal horror stories I have heard about them (likely not true) from my youth have mentally traumatized me.




    do we use the same plane ticket to get home?




    Yes you usually use the same plane ticket to your destination and back. Probably 80% (it is falling with the advent of budget airlines and budget fares) of tickets purchased are return/round-trip tickets.



    Why it’s sometimes better to book two one-way airplane tickets instead of one round-trip flight




    The percentage of one-way tickets purchased has risen steadily since
    2014, and a report by the New York Times found that 44% of airline
    travelers booked a one-way ticket instead of a round-trip ticket




    Return tickets are usually cheaper than two one way tickets and sometimes even cheaper than a single one way ticket. The reasons for that will be left out at this time.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 4





      Re Aeroflot - while plenty of true horror stories happened during the USSR and in the time shortly after that, they have now (statistically speaking) improved their safety substantially, and aren't much of a threat any longer. It's smaller Russian airlines you have to worry about, many of those are still pretty unsafe due to things like shortages of well-trained Russian pilots.

      – Muzer
      Mar 8 at 9:47
















    10














    When comparing two or more plane tickets, you use such criteria as price, number of stops (layovers/transits), safety history, customer service reputation, on time performance of the airline, airport flying out of and how close it is to your house and destination, quality of their frequent flyer program, penalty for rebooking and re-pricing, brand name, etc.



    Typically you want lower price, fewer stops, good customer service, low penalty for rebooking, generous frequent flyer program, excellent safety, etc. You get the idea.



    Everyone will have their own mental utility function giving different weights to the various criteria depending on importance to them, just like when deciding which brand of car to purchase. The rational goal will be aim at the combination that gives you the highest satisfaction U (utility).



    U=f(x1, x2,...xn)



    I for example will never fly Aeroflot even if I was offered first class tickets for $10 because the anecdotal horror stories I have heard about them (likely not true) from my youth have mentally traumatized me.




    do we use the same plane ticket to get home?




    Yes you usually use the same plane ticket to your destination and back. Probably 80% (it is falling with the advent of budget airlines and budget fares) of tickets purchased are return/round-trip tickets.



    Why it’s sometimes better to book two one-way airplane tickets instead of one round-trip flight




    The percentage of one-way tickets purchased has risen steadily since
    2014, and a report by the New York Times found that 44% of airline
    travelers booked a one-way ticket instead of a round-trip ticket




    Return tickets are usually cheaper than two one way tickets and sometimes even cheaper than a single one way ticket. The reasons for that will be left out at this time.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 4





      Re Aeroflot - while plenty of true horror stories happened during the USSR and in the time shortly after that, they have now (statistically speaking) improved their safety substantially, and aren't much of a threat any longer. It's smaller Russian airlines you have to worry about, many of those are still pretty unsafe due to things like shortages of well-trained Russian pilots.

      – Muzer
      Mar 8 at 9:47














    10












    10








    10







    When comparing two or more plane tickets, you use such criteria as price, number of stops (layovers/transits), safety history, customer service reputation, on time performance of the airline, airport flying out of and how close it is to your house and destination, quality of their frequent flyer program, penalty for rebooking and re-pricing, brand name, etc.



    Typically you want lower price, fewer stops, good customer service, low penalty for rebooking, generous frequent flyer program, excellent safety, etc. You get the idea.



    Everyone will have their own mental utility function giving different weights to the various criteria depending on importance to them, just like when deciding which brand of car to purchase. The rational goal will be aim at the combination that gives you the highest satisfaction U (utility).



    U=f(x1, x2,...xn)



    I for example will never fly Aeroflot even if I was offered first class tickets for $10 because the anecdotal horror stories I have heard about them (likely not true) from my youth have mentally traumatized me.




    do we use the same plane ticket to get home?




    Yes you usually use the same plane ticket to your destination and back. Probably 80% (it is falling with the advent of budget airlines and budget fares) of tickets purchased are return/round-trip tickets.



    Why it’s sometimes better to book two one-way airplane tickets instead of one round-trip flight




    The percentage of one-way tickets purchased has risen steadily since
    2014, and a report by the New York Times found that 44% of airline
    travelers booked a one-way ticket instead of a round-trip ticket




    Return tickets are usually cheaper than two one way tickets and sometimes even cheaper than a single one way ticket. The reasons for that will be left out at this time.






    share|improve this answer















    When comparing two or more plane tickets, you use such criteria as price, number of stops (layovers/transits), safety history, customer service reputation, on time performance of the airline, airport flying out of and how close it is to your house and destination, quality of their frequent flyer program, penalty for rebooking and re-pricing, brand name, etc.



    Typically you want lower price, fewer stops, good customer service, low penalty for rebooking, generous frequent flyer program, excellent safety, etc. You get the idea.



    Everyone will have their own mental utility function giving different weights to the various criteria depending on importance to them, just like when deciding which brand of car to purchase. The rational goal will be aim at the combination that gives you the highest satisfaction U (utility).



    U=f(x1, x2,...xn)



    I for example will never fly Aeroflot even if I was offered first class tickets for $10 because the anecdotal horror stories I have heard about them (likely not true) from my youth have mentally traumatized me.




    do we use the same plane ticket to get home?




    Yes you usually use the same plane ticket to your destination and back. Probably 80% (it is falling with the advent of budget airlines and budget fares) of tickets purchased are return/round-trip tickets.



    Why it’s sometimes better to book two one-way airplane tickets instead of one round-trip flight




    The percentage of one-way tickets purchased has risen steadily since
    2014, and a report by the New York Times found that 44% of airline
    travelers booked a one-way ticket instead of a round-trip ticket




    Return tickets are usually cheaper than two one way tickets and sometimes even cheaper than a single one way ticket. The reasons for that will be left out at this time.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Mar 8 at 9:29

























    answered Mar 8 at 8:05









    ThE iLlEgAl aLiEnThE iLlEgAl aLiEn

    1




    1








    • 4





      Re Aeroflot - while plenty of true horror stories happened during the USSR and in the time shortly after that, they have now (statistically speaking) improved their safety substantially, and aren't much of a threat any longer. It's smaller Russian airlines you have to worry about, many of those are still pretty unsafe due to things like shortages of well-trained Russian pilots.

      – Muzer
      Mar 8 at 9:47














    • 4





      Re Aeroflot - while plenty of true horror stories happened during the USSR and in the time shortly after that, they have now (statistically speaking) improved their safety substantially, and aren't much of a threat any longer. It's smaller Russian airlines you have to worry about, many of those are still pretty unsafe due to things like shortages of well-trained Russian pilots.

      – Muzer
      Mar 8 at 9:47








    4




    4





    Re Aeroflot - while plenty of true horror stories happened during the USSR and in the time shortly after that, they have now (statistically speaking) improved their safety substantially, and aren't much of a threat any longer. It's smaller Russian airlines you have to worry about, many of those are still pretty unsafe due to things like shortages of well-trained Russian pilots.

    – Muzer
    Mar 8 at 9:47





    Re Aeroflot - while plenty of true horror stories happened during the USSR and in the time shortly after that, they have now (statistically speaking) improved their safety substantially, and aren't much of a threat any longer. It's smaller Russian airlines you have to worry about, many of those are still pretty unsafe due to things like shortages of well-trained Russian pilots.

    – Muzer
    Mar 8 at 9:47













    1














    Which one is better depends on what is important to you so nobody else can tell you. However there are a few things to think about that might help you decide. The big difference between multiple individual tickets and a return (or routed) ticket is who is responsible for breaks in the journey. A few years ago my daughter came back from Australia to Ireland for Christmas. Bad weather meant her return flight from Dublin to London was delayed until after her onward flight from London to Australia had taken off. Because she had bought separate tickets, she was considered as a no-show and had to arrange her own alternatives. Had she bought a through ticket, the airline would have been responsible for getting her home. Whether that matters to you depends on you and your journey.



    This might seem obvious, but planes only fly from airport to airport, so think about how you intend to get to and from the airport at both ends. That will often help you decide which airport you actually want to fly to. RaynAir are renowned for getting you close but not necessarily close enough to your destination. Stanstead to London will cost you a few hours and quite a few quid. As will Girona to Barcelona, Beauvais to Paris, or Charleroi to Brussels. If you know what to expect before hand and have planned for it, then it isn't a problem, but if you didn't know, it could turn into a nasty surprise.



    Each time you have to change on a journey adds stress to the journey, so while you can often save a little money taking the round-about route, only you can decide if the extra stress is worth the savings. When I was younger, I used to love taking weird and wonderful routes because they often brought me to exciting places I had never seen before, now-days I prefer fly as near direct as possible even if it means changing the dates I travel.



    How flexible are you? The more rigid your plans the less choice you will have and (usually) the higher price you will have to pay. Ask yourself if you really need to be in a given place at the same time everybody else wants to be there. Late May on the Cote d'Azure is magical, unfortunately you have to share it with the Cannes film festival so everywhere is overpriced and booked out. The first week of June is just as magical but without the crowds.



    Are you happy to organise every thing for yourself, or are you willing (and able) to pay for somebody else (a travel agent) to look after all the details for you. For your first major journey, I would recommend a travel agent. They can do so much more then just book your flights, including most of the things you haven't thought of yet. I would suggest you do a little preparation first. Know where you want to go and when. Know what you would like to do when you get there (tickets booked in advance are usually much cheaper). And know what is important to you and what you can be flexible with. Listen to their advice but make your own decisions. Finally, have fun.






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      Which one is better depends on what is important to you so nobody else can tell you. However there are a few things to think about that might help you decide. The big difference between multiple individual tickets and a return (or routed) ticket is who is responsible for breaks in the journey. A few years ago my daughter came back from Australia to Ireland for Christmas. Bad weather meant her return flight from Dublin to London was delayed until after her onward flight from London to Australia had taken off. Because she had bought separate tickets, she was considered as a no-show and had to arrange her own alternatives. Had she bought a through ticket, the airline would have been responsible for getting her home. Whether that matters to you depends on you and your journey.



      This might seem obvious, but planes only fly from airport to airport, so think about how you intend to get to and from the airport at both ends. That will often help you decide which airport you actually want to fly to. RaynAir are renowned for getting you close but not necessarily close enough to your destination. Stanstead to London will cost you a few hours and quite a few quid. As will Girona to Barcelona, Beauvais to Paris, or Charleroi to Brussels. If you know what to expect before hand and have planned for it, then it isn't a problem, but if you didn't know, it could turn into a nasty surprise.



      Each time you have to change on a journey adds stress to the journey, so while you can often save a little money taking the round-about route, only you can decide if the extra stress is worth the savings. When I was younger, I used to love taking weird and wonderful routes because they often brought me to exciting places I had never seen before, now-days I prefer fly as near direct as possible even if it means changing the dates I travel.



      How flexible are you? The more rigid your plans the less choice you will have and (usually) the higher price you will have to pay. Ask yourself if you really need to be in a given place at the same time everybody else wants to be there. Late May on the Cote d'Azure is magical, unfortunately you have to share it with the Cannes film festival so everywhere is overpriced and booked out. The first week of June is just as magical but without the crowds.



      Are you happy to organise every thing for yourself, or are you willing (and able) to pay for somebody else (a travel agent) to look after all the details for you. For your first major journey, I would recommend a travel agent. They can do so much more then just book your flights, including most of the things you haven't thought of yet. I would suggest you do a little preparation first. Know where you want to go and when. Know what you would like to do when you get there (tickets booked in advance are usually much cheaper). And know what is important to you and what you can be flexible with. Listen to their advice but make your own decisions. Finally, have fun.






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1







        Which one is better depends on what is important to you so nobody else can tell you. However there are a few things to think about that might help you decide. The big difference between multiple individual tickets and a return (or routed) ticket is who is responsible for breaks in the journey. A few years ago my daughter came back from Australia to Ireland for Christmas. Bad weather meant her return flight from Dublin to London was delayed until after her onward flight from London to Australia had taken off. Because she had bought separate tickets, she was considered as a no-show and had to arrange her own alternatives. Had she bought a through ticket, the airline would have been responsible for getting her home. Whether that matters to you depends on you and your journey.



        This might seem obvious, but planes only fly from airport to airport, so think about how you intend to get to and from the airport at both ends. That will often help you decide which airport you actually want to fly to. RaynAir are renowned for getting you close but not necessarily close enough to your destination. Stanstead to London will cost you a few hours and quite a few quid. As will Girona to Barcelona, Beauvais to Paris, or Charleroi to Brussels. If you know what to expect before hand and have planned for it, then it isn't a problem, but if you didn't know, it could turn into a nasty surprise.



        Each time you have to change on a journey adds stress to the journey, so while you can often save a little money taking the round-about route, only you can decide if the extra stress is worth the savings. When I was younger, I used to love taking weird and wonderful routes because they often brought me to exciting places I had never seen before, now-days I prefer fly as near direct as possible even if it means changing the dates I travel.



        How flexible are you? The more rigid your plans the less choice you will have and (usually) the higher price you will have to pay. Ask yourself if you really need to be in a given place at the same time everybody else wants to be there. Late May on the Cote d'Azure is magical, unfortunately you have to share it with the Cannes film festival so everywhere is overpriced and booked out. The first week of June is just as magical but without the crowds.



        Are you happy to organise every thing for yourself, or are you willing (and able) to pay for somebody else (a travel agent) to look after all the details for you. For your first major journey, I would recommend a travel agent. They can do so much more then just book your flights, including most of the things you haven't thought of yet. I would suggest you do a little preparation first. Know where you want to go and when. Know what you would like to do when you get there (tickets booked in advance are usually much cheaper). And know what is important to you and what you can be flexible with. Listen to their advice but make your own decisions. Finally, have fun.






        share|improve this answer













        Which one is better depends on what is important to you so nobody else can tell you. However there are a few things to think about that might help you decide. The big difference between multiple individual tickets and a return (or routed) ticket is who is responsible for breaks in the journey. A few years ago my daughter came back from Australia to Ireland for Christmas. Bad weather meant her return flight from Dublin to London was delayed until after her onward flight from London to Australia had taken off. Because she had bought separate tickets, she was considered as a no-show and had to arrange her own alternatives. Had she bought a through ticket, the airline would have been responsible for getting her home. Whether that matters to you depends on you and your journey.



        This might seem obvious, but planes only fly from airport to airport, so think about how you intend to get to and from the airport at both ends. That will often help you decide which airport you actually want to fly to. RaynAir are renowned for getting you close but not necessarily close enough to your destination. Stanstead to London will cost you a few hours and quite a few quid. As will Girona to Barcelona, Beauvais to Paris, or Charleroi to Brussels. If you know what to expect before hand and have planned for it, then it isn't a problem, but if you didn't know, it could turn into a nasty surprise.



        Each time you have to change on a journey adds stress to the journey, so while you can often save a little money taking the round-about route, only you can decide if the extra stress is worth the savings. When I was younger, I used to love taking weird and wonderful routes because they often brought me to exciting places I had never seen before, now-days I prefer fly as near direct as possible even if it means changing the dates I travel.



        How flexible are you? The more rigid your plans the less choice you will have and (usually) the higher price you will have to pay. Ask yourself if you really need to be in a given place at the same time everybody else wants to be there. Late May on the Cote d'Azure is magical, unfortunately you have to share it with the Cannes film festival so everywhere is overpriced and booked out. The first week of June is just as magical but without the crowds.



        Are you happy to organise every thing for yourself, or are you willing (and able) to pay for somebody else (a travel agent) to look after all the details for you. For your first major journey, I would recommend a travel agent. They can do so much more then just book your flights, including most of the things you haven't thought of yet. I would suggest you do a little preparation first. Know where you want to go and when. Know what you would like to do when you get there (tickets booked in advance are usually much cheaper). And know what is important to you and what you can be flexible with. Listen to their advice but make your own decisions. Finally, have fun.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Mar 8 at 16:08









        Paul SmithPaul Smith

        64536




        64536















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