How to coordinate airplane tickets? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) April 2019 photo competition, “Road trip” (Read, rules are different.)How can a kid fly with one parent and return with the other?Booking flight tickets together or in separate parts?How far in advance is it recommended to book flight tickets?Can I fly in a cargo airplane?How to buy one airplane seat and reserve adjacent ones?How can I buy advance tickets for Anne Frank House?Any Airlines with Open ended tickets where Return can be determined later by design, or without a change fee?How do airlines link travellers who bought separate tickets?Is https://www.flightsticketcorp.com a reliable website to book air tickets?Combining/Linking reservations/bookings of flight tickets of two people for the common part of the journeyWhat are the pros/cons of airlines selling tickets on a futures market?

If the probability of a dog barking one or more times in a given hour is 84%, then what is the probability of a dog barking in 30 minutes?

What's the point of the test set?

How to write capital alpha?

A term for a woman complaining about things/begging in a cute/childish way

How many time has Arya actually used Needle?

Is CEO the "profession" with the most psychopaths?

Central Vacuuming: Is it worth it, and how does it compare to normal vacuuming?

What order were files/directories output in dir?

Strange behavior of Object.defineProperty() in JavaScript

What would you call this weird metallic apparatus that allows you to lift people?

Is there any word for a place full of confusion?

Girl Hackers - Logic Puzzle

Lagrange four-squares theorem --- deterministic complexity

Amount of permutations on an NxNxN Rubik's Cube

Co-worker has annoying ringtone

Karn the great creator - 'card from outside the game' in sealed

Can the Flaming Sphere spell be rammed into multiple Tiny creatures that are in the same 5-foot square?

Converted a Scalar function to a TVF function for parallel execution-Still running in Serial mode

What does 丫 mean? 丫是什么意思?

preposition before coffee

Do wooden building fires get hotter than 600°C?

Flight departed from the gate 5 min before scheduled departure time. Refund options

Sum letters are not two different

How often does castling occur in grandmaster games?



How to coordinate airplane tickets?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)
April 2019 photo competition, “Road trip” (Read, rules are different.)How can a kid fly with one parent and return with the other?Booking flight tickets together or in separate parts?How far in advance is it recommended to book flight tickets?Can I fly in a cargo airplane?How to buy one airplane seat and reserve adjacent ones?How can I buy advance tickets for Anne Frank House?Any Airlines with Open ended tickets where Return can be determined later by design, or without a change fee?How do airlines link travellers who bought separate tickets?Is https://www.flightsticketcorp.com a reliable website to book air tickets?Combining/Linking reservations/bookings of flight tickets of two people for the common part of the journeyWhat are the pros/cons of airlines selling tickets on a futures market?



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








11















I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) and Budapest (BUD).



What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.










share|improve this question



















  • 4





    Here's a potential alternative: if your daughter is old & mature enough, consider an unaccompanied minor service instead, where the airline escorts her through the flight. This would be much cheaper & less hassle than you flying along both ways, and is usually available for kids 8+ (exact rules vary per airline).

    – jpatokal
    Apr 2 at 3:19







  • 1





    Is she under 11?

    – Harper
    Apr 2 at 5:01






  • 1





    Why not just book the tickets separately, then when you check in for your flight, select/ask for seats next to each other? I've done this several times between UK/US, UK/Europe. I simply check in and select seat 25A, then the other person I travel with also checks in picking seat 25B. This way no matter how you book the flights, you can sit together.

    – Uciebila
    Apr 2 at 12:08






  • 3





    Please don't just use airport codes to describe your journey. People have to look them up (DFW is fairly well-known to international travellers but most people won't know what BUD is, even though it's obvious once you know). They're also very susceptible to typos: if you'd written "Bufapest", people would have guessed the typo but "BUF" would have got you advice about travelling to Buffalo, NY.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 13:26






  • 1





    @Uciebila it is my understanding that some airlines are now intentionally charging extra for families to sit together. Your method may/may not work in the future.

    – emory
    Apr 2 at 13:34

















11















I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) and Budapest (BUD).



What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.










share|improve this question



















  • 4





    Here's a potential alternative: if your daughter is old & mature enough, consider an unaccompanied minor service instead, where the airline escorts her through the flight. This would be much cheaper & less hassle than you flying along both ways, and is usually available for kids 8+ (exact rules vary per airline).

    – jpatokal
    Apr 2 at 3:19







  • 1





    Is she under 11?

    – Harper
    Apr 2 at 5:01






  • 1





    Why not just book the tickets separately, then when you check in for your flight, select/ask for seats next to each other? I've done this several times between UK/US, UK/Europe. I simply check in and select seat 25A, then the other person I travel with also checks in picking seat 25B. This way no matter how you book the flights, you can sit together.

    – Uciebila
    Apr 2 at 12:08






  • 3





    Please don't just use airport codes to describe your journey. People have to look them up (DFW is fairly well-known to international travellers but most people won't know what BUD is, even though it's obvious once you know). They're also very susceptible to typos: if you'd written "Bufapest", people would have guessed the typo but "BUF" would have got you advice about travelling to Buffalo, NY.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 13:26






  • 1





    @Uciebila it is my understanding that some airlines are now intentionally charging extra for families to sit together. Your method may/may not work in the future.

    – emory
    Apr 2 at 13:34













11












11








11








I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) and Budapest (BUD).



What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.










share|improve this question
















I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) and Budapest (BUD).



What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.







air-travel tickets bookings airlines






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 2 at 13:23









David Richerby

14.9k94790




14.9k94790










asked Apr 2 at 0:50









xxbbccxxbbcc

15815




15815







  • 4





    Here's a potential alternative: if your daughter is old & mature enough, consider an unaccompanied minor service instead, where the airline escorts her through the flight. This would be much cheaper & less hassle than you flying along both ways, and is usually available for kids 8+ (exact rules vary per airline).

    – jpatokal
    Apr 2 at 3:19







  • 1





    Is she under 11?

    – Harper
    Apr 2 at 5:01






  • 1





    Why not just book the tickets separately, then when you check in for your flight, select/ask for seats next to each other? I've done this several times between UK/US, UK/Europe. I simply check in and select seat 25A, then the other person I travel with also checks in picking seat 25B. This way no matter how you book the flights, you can sit together.

    – Uciebila
    Apr 2 at 12:08






  • 3





    Please don't just use airport codes to describe your journey. People have to look them up (DFW is fairly well-known to international travellers but most people won't know what BUD is, even though it's obvious once you know). They're also very susceptible to typos: if you'd written "Bufapest", people would have guessed the typo but "BUF" would have got you advice about travelling to Buffalo, NY.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 13:26






  • 1





    @Uciebila it is my understanding that some airlines are now intentionally charging extra for families to sit together. Your method may/may not work in the future.

    – emory
    Apr 2 at 13:34












  • 4





    Here's a potential alternative: if your daughter is old & mature enough, consider an unaccompanied minor service instead, where the airline escorts her through the flight. This would be much cheaper & less hassle than you flying along both ways, and is usually available for kids 8+ (exact rules vary per airline).

    – jpatokal
    Apr 2 at 3:19







  • 1





    Is she under 11?

    – Harper
    Apr 2 at 5:01






  • 1





    Why not just book the tickets separately, then when you check in for your flight, select/ask for seats next to each other? I've done this several times between UK/US, UK/Europe. I simply check in and select seat 25A, then the other person I travel with also checks in picking seat 25B. This way no matter how you book the flights, you can sit together.

    – Uciebila
    Apr 2 at 12:08






  • 3





    Please don't just use airport codes to describe your journey. People have to look them up (DFW is fairly well-known to international travellers but most people won't know what BUD is, even though it's obvious once you know). They're also very susceptible to typos: if you'd written "Bufapest", people would have guessed the typo but "BUF" would have got you advice about travelling to Buffalo, NY.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 13:26






  • 1





    @Uciebila it is my understanding that some airlines are now intentionally charging extra for families to sit together. Your method may/may not work in the future.

    – emory
    Apr 2 at 13:34







4




4





Here's a potential alternative: if your daughter is old & mature enough, consider an unaccompanied minor service instead, where the airline escorts her through the flight. This would be much cheaper & less hassle than you flying along both ways, and is usually available for kids 8+ (exact rules vary per airline).

– jpatokal
Apr 2 at 3:19






Here's a potential alternative: if your daughter is old & mature enough, consider an unaccompanied minor service instead, where the airline escorts her through the flight. This would be much cheaper & less hassle than you flying along both ways, and is usually available for kids 8+ (exact rules vary per airline).

– jpatokal
Apr 2 at 3:19





1




1





Is she under 11?

– Harper
Apr 2 at 5:01





Is she under 11?

– Harper
Apr 2 at 5:01




1




1





Why not just book the tickets separately, then when you check in for your flight, select/ask for seats next to each other? I've done this several times between UK/US, UK/Europe. I simply check in and select seat 25A, then the other person I travel with also checks in picking seat 25B. This way no matter how you book the flights, you can sit together.

– Uciebila
Apr 2 at 12:08





Why not just book the tickets separately, then when you check in for your flight, select/ask for seats next to each other? I've done this several times between UK/US, UK/Europe. I simply check in and select seat 25A, then the other person I travel with also checks in picking seat 25B. This way no matter how you book the flights, you can sit together.

– Uciebila
Apr 2 at 12:08




3




3





Please don't just use airport codes to describe your journey. People have to look them up (DFW is fairly well-known to international travellers but most people won't know what BUD is, even though it's obvious once you know). They're also very susceptible to typos: if you'd written "Bufapest", people would have guessed the typo but "BUF" would have got you advice about travelling to Buffalo, NY.

– David Richerby
Apr 2 at 13:26





Please don't just use airport codes to describe your journey. People have to look them up (DFW is fairly well-known to international travellers but most people won't know what BUD is, even though it's obvious once you know). They're also very susceptible to typos: if you'd written "Bufapest", people would have guessed the typo but "BUF" would have got you advice about travelling to Buffalo, NY.

– David Richerby
Apr 2 at 13:26




1




1





@Uciebila it is my understanding that some airlines are now intentionally charging extra for families to sit together. Your method may/may not work in the future.

– emory
Apr 2 at 13:34





@Uciebila it is my understanding that some airlines are now intentionally charging extra for families to sit together. Your method may/may not work in the future.

– emory
Apr 2 at 13:34










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















16














You could proceed in two different ways:



  • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

  • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).

The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    Please note that with the second method, if you miss either of the return flights (BUD-DFW) because of delays or cancellations on a flight on the other booking, the airline will have no legal duty to make sure you get to your destination. If you miss the first leg on your BUD-DFW-BUD ticket, they will probably cancel the second leg as well.

    – Jacob Bundgaard
    Apr 2 at 8:40


















12














The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:



  • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

  • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.

The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 1:11












  • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

    – xxbbcc
    Apr 2 at 1:27











  • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 2:02







  • 2





    @GregHewgill I didn't know where BUD was, either (I edited it into the question, because people shouldn't have to know that). But, come on, Budapest is a European capital, not some unmade airstrip in the middle of the Amazon rain forest. While a travel agent might be good advice for the particular coordination requirements of this trip, it's absolutely not required for the "We need to get to Budapest" part.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 14:07











  • @DavidRicherby: I wasn't trying to imply that a travel agent was necessary for any trip to Budapest. Of course it isn't. My answer was written within the context of the question, where the OP has specific accompaniment requirements.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 19:26


















4














This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



enter image description here



The results look like this.



As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






share|improve this answer

























  • My mother is willing to shell out the extra money to AA to fly directly from Philly to Budapest, just to avoid dealing with the extra hop on the European end (and avoid the drive to Newark or JFK). For her, it's not so much the exhaustion, it's more the mobility issues (she's had some less-than-pleasant interactions with airports vis-à-vis getting a wheelchair and someone to push it) and the dealing with European Union red tape twice instead of once.

    – Martha
    Apr 2 at 19:13











  • There's a direct from Toronto as well (and AC flies DFW-YYZ).

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 19:50











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f134980%2fhow-to-coordinate-airplane-tickets%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









16














You could proceed in two different ways:



  • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

  • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).

The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    Please note that with the second method, if you miss either of the return flights (BUD-DFW) because of delays or cancellations on a flight on the other booking, the airline will have no legal duty to make sure you get to your destination. If you miss the first leg on your BUD-DFW-BUD ticket, they will probably cancel the second leg as well.

    – Jacob Bundgaard
    Apr 2 at 8:40















16














You could proceed in two different ways:



  • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

  • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).

The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    Please note that with the second method, if you miss either of the return flights (BUD-DFW) because of delays or cancellations on a flight on the other booking, the airline will have no legal duty to make sure you get to your destination. If you miss the first leg on your BUD-DFW-BUD ticket, they will probably cancel the second leg as well.

    – Jacob Bundgaard
    Apr 2 at 8:40













16












16








16







You could proceed in two different ways:



  • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

  • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).

The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






share|improve this answer













You could proceed in two different ways:



  • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

  • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).

The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 2 at 1:11









MophotlaMophotla

675211




675211







  • 2





    Please note that with the second method, if you miss either of the return flights (BUD-DFW) because of delays or cancellations on a flight on the other booking, the airline will have no legal duty to make sure you get to your destination. If you miss the first leg on your BUD-DFW-BUD ticket, they will probably cancel the second leg as well.

    – Jacob Bundgaard
    Apr 2 at 8:40












  • 2





    Please note that with the second method, if you miss either of the return flights (BUD-DFW) because of delays or cancellations on a flight on the other booking, the airline will have no legal duty to make sure you get to your destination. If you miss the first leg on your BUD-DFW-BUD ticket, they will probably cancel the second leg as well.

    – Jacob Bundgaard
    Apr 2 at 8:40







2




2





Please note that with the second method, if you miss either of the return flights (BUD-DFW) because of delays or cancellations on a flight on the other booking, the airline will have no legal duty to make sure you get to your destination. If you miss the first leg on your BUD-DFW-BUD ticket, they will probably cancel the second leg as well.

– Jacob Bundgaard
Apr 2 at 8:40





Please note that with the second method, if you miss either of the return flights (BUD-DFW) because of delays or cancellations on a flight on the other booking, the airline will have no legal duty to make sure you get to your destination. If you miss the first leg on your BUD-DFW-BUD ticket, they will probably cancel the second leg as well.

– Jacob Bundgaard
Apr 2 at 8:40













12














The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:



  • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

  • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.

The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 1:11












  • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

    – xxbbcc
    Apr 2 at 1:27











  • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 2:02







  • 2





    @GregHewgill I didn't know where BUD was, either (I edited it into the question, because people shouldn't have to know that). But, come on, Budapest is a European capital, not some unmade airstrip in the middle of the Amazon rain forest. While a travel agent might be good advice for the particular coordination requirements of this trip, it's absolutely not required for the "We need to get to Budapest" part.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 14:07











  • @DavidRicherby: I wasn't trying to imply that a travel agent was necessary for any trip to Budapest. Of course it isn't. My answer was written within the context of the question, where the OP has specific accompaniment requirements.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 19:26















12














The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:



  • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

  • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.

The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 1:11












  • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

    – xxbbcc
    Apr 2 at 1:27











  • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 2:02







  • 2





    @GregHewgill I didn't know where BUD was, either (I edited it into the question, because people shouldn't have to know that). But, come on, Budapest is a European capital, not some unmade airstrip in the middle of the Amazon rain forest. While a travel agent might be good advice for the particular coordination requirements of this trip, it's absolutely not required for the "We need to get to Budapest" part.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 14:07











  • @DavidRicherby: I wasn't trying to imply that a travel agent was necessary for any trip to Budapest. Of course it isn't. My answer was written within the context of the question, where the OP has specific accompaniment requirements.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 19:26













12












12








12







The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:



  • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

  • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.

The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






share|improve this answer













The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:



  • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

  • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.

The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 2 at 0:59









Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill

28k374104




28k374104







  • 1





    I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 1:11












  • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

    – xxbbcc
    Apr 2 at 1:27











  • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 2:02







  • 2





    @GregHewgill I didn't know where BUD was, either (I edited it into the question, because people shouldn't have to know that). But, come on, Budapest is a European capital, not some unmade airstrip in the middle of the Amazon rain forest. While a travel agent might be good advice for the particular coordination requirements of this trip, it's absolutely not required for the "We need to get to Budapest" part.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 14:07











  • @DavidRicherby: I wasn't trying to imply that a travel agent was necessary for any trip to Budapest. Of course it isn't. My answer was written within the context of the question, where the OP has specific accompaniment requirements.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 19:26












  • 1





    I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 1:11












  • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

    – xxbbcc
    Apr 2 at 1:27











  • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 2:02







  • 2





    @GregHewgill I didn't know where BUD was, either (I edited it into the question, because people shouldn't have to know that). But, come on, Budapest is a European capital, not some unmade airstrip in the middle of the Amazon rain forest. While a travel agent might be good advice for the particular coordination requirements of this trip, it's absolutely not required for the "We need to get to Budapest" part.

    – David Richerby
    Apr 2 at 14:07











  • @DavidRicherby: I wasn't trying to imply that a travel agent was necessary for any trip to Budapest. Of course it isn't. My answer was written within the context of the question, where the OP has specific accompaniment requirements.

    – Greg Hewgill
    Apr 2 at 19:26







1




1





I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

– Greg Hewgill
Apr 2 at 1:11






I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

– Greg Hewgill
Apr 2 at 1:11














Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

– xxbbcc
Apr 2 at 1:27





Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

– xxbbcc
Apr 2 at 1:27













All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

– chx
Apr 2 at 2:02






All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

– chx
Apr 2 at 2:02





2




2





@GregHewgill I didn't know where BUD was, either (I edited it into the question, because people shouldn't have to know that). But, come on, Budapest is a European capital, not some unmade airstrip in the middle of the Amazon rain forest. While a travel agent might be good advice for the particular coordination requirements of this trip, it's absolutely not required for the "We need to get to Budapest" part.

– David Richerby
Apr 2 at 14:07





@GregHewgill I didn't know where BUD was, either (I edited it into the question, because people shouldn't have to know that). But, come on, Budapest is a European capital, not some unmade airstrip in the middle of the Amazon rain forest. While a travel agent might be good advice for the particular coordination requirements of this trip, it's absolutely not required for the "We need to get to Budapest" part.

– David Richerby
Apr 2 at 14:07













@DavidRicherby: I wasn't trying to imply that a travel agent was necessary for any trip to Budapest. Of course it isn't. My answer was written within the context of the question, where the OP has specific accompaniment requirements.

– Greg Hewgill
Apr 2 at 19:26





@DavidRicherby: I wasn't trying to imply that a travel agent was necessary for any trip to Budapest. Of course it isn't. My answer was written within the context of the question, where the OP has specific accompaniment requirements.

– Greg Hewgill
Apr 2 at 19:26











4














This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



enter image description here



The results look like this.



As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






share|improve this answer

























  • My mother is willing to shell out the extra money to AA to fly directly from Philly to Budapest, just to avoid dealing with the extra hop on the European end (and avoid the drive to Newark or JFK). For her, it's not so much the exhaustion, it's more the mobility issues (she's had some less-than-pleasant interactions with airports vis-à-vis getting a wheelchair and someone to push it) and the dealing with European Union red tape twice instead of once.

    – Martha
    Apr 2 at 19:13











  • There's a direct from Toronto as well (and AC flies DFW-YYZ).

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 19:50















4














This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



enter image description here



The results look like this.



As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






share|improve this answer

























  • My mother is willing to shell out the extra money to AA to fly directly from Philly to Budapest, just to avoid dealing with the extra hop on the European end (and avoid the drive to Newark or JFK). For her, it's not so much the exhaustion, it's more the mobility issues (she's had some less-than-pleasant interactions with airports vis-à-vis getting a wheelchair and someone to push it) and the dealing with European Union red tape twice instead of once.

    – Martha
    Apr 2 at 19:13











  • There's a direct from Toronto as well (and AC flies DFW-YYZ).

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 19:50













4












4








4







This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



enter image description here



The results look like this.



As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






share|improve this answer















This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



enter image description here



The results look like this.



As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 2 at 2:04

























answered Apr 2 at 1:58









chxchx

39.3k485195




39.3k485195












  • My mother is willing to shell out the extra money to AA to fly directly from Philly to Budapest, just to avoid dealing with the extra hop on the European end (and avoid the drive to Newark or JFK). For her, it's not so much the exhaustion, it's more the mobility issues (she's had some less-than-pleasant interactions with airports vis-à-vis getting a wheelchair and someone to push it) and the dealing with European Union red tape twice instead of once.

    – Martha
    Apr 2 at 19:13











  • There's a direct from Toronto as well (and AC flies DFW-YYZ).

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 19:50

















  • My mother is willing to shell out the extra money to AA to fly directly from Philly to Budapest, just to avoid dealing with the extra hop on the European end (and avoid the drive to Newark or JFK). For her, it's not so much the exhaustion, it's more the mobility issues (she's had some less-than-pleasant interactions with airports vis-à-vis getting a wheelchair and someone to push it) and the dealing with European Union red tape twice instead of once.

    – Martha
    Apr 2 at 19:13











  • There's a direct from Toronto as well (and AC flies DFW-YYZ).

    – chx
    Apr 2 at 19:50
















My mother is willing to shell out the extra money to AA to fly directly from Philly to Budapest, just to avoid dealing with the extra hop on the European end (and avoid the drive to Newark or JFK). For her, it's not so much the exhaustion, it's more the mobility issues (she's had some less-than-pleasant interactions with airports vis-à-vis getting a wheelchair and someone to push it) and the dealing with European Union red tape twice instead of once.

– Martha
Apr 2 at 19:13





My mother is willing to shell out the extra money to AA to fly directly from Philly to Budapest, just to avoid dealing with the extra hop on the European end (and avoid the drive to Newark or JFK). For her, it's not so much the exhaustion, it's more the mobility issues (she's had some less-than-pleasant interactions with airports vis-à-vis getting a wheelchair and someone to push it) and the dealing with European Union red tape twice instead of once.

– Martha
Apr 2 at 19:13













There's a direct from Toronto as well (and AC flies DFW-YYZ).

– chx
Apr 2 at 19:50





There's a direct from Toronto as well (and AC flies DFW-YYZ).

– chx
Apr 2 at 19:50

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f134980%2fhow-to-coordinate-airplane-tickets%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Triangular numbers and gcdProving sum of a set is $0 pmod n$ if $n$ is odd, or $fracn2 pmod n$ if $n$ is even?Is greatest common divisor of two numbers really their smallest linear combination?GCD, LCM RelationshipProve a set of nonnegative integers with greatest common divisor 1 and closed under addition has all but finite many nonnegative integers.all pairs of a and b in an equation containing gcdTriangular Numbers Modulo $k$ - Hit All Values?Understanding the Existence and Uniqueness of the GCDGCD and LCM with logical symbolsThe greatest common divisor of two positive integers less than 100 is equal to 3. Their least common multiple is twelve times one of the integers.Suppose that for all integers $x$, $x|a$ and $x|b$ if and only if $x|c$. Then $c = gcd(a,b)$Which is the gcd of 2 numbers which are multiplied and the result is 600000?

Србија Садржај Етимологија Географија Историја Политички систем и уставно-правно уређење Становништво Привреда Образовање Култура Спорт Државни празници Галерија Напомене Референце Литература Спољашње везе Мени за навигацију44°48′N 20°28′E / 44.800° СГШ; 20.467° ИГД / 44.800; 20.46744°48′N 20°28′E / 44.800° СГШ; 20.467° ИГД / 44.800; 20.467ууРезултати пописа 2011. према старости и полуу„Положај, рељеф и клима”„Europe: Serbia”„Основни подаци”„Gross domestic product based on purchasing-power-parity (PPP) valuation of country GDP”„Human Development Report 2018 – "Human Development Indices and Indicators 6”„Устав Републике Србије”Правопис српскога језикаGoogle DriveComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesCalcium and Magnesium in Groundwater: Occurrence and Significance for Human Health„UNSD — Methodology”„Процене становништва | Републички завод за статистику Србије”The Age of Nepotism: Travel Journals and Observations from the Balkans During the Depression„The Serbian Revolution and the Serbian State”„Устав Србије”„Serbia a few steps away from concluding WTO accession negotiations”„A credible enlargement perspective for and enhanced EU engagement with the Western Balkans”„Freedom in the World 2017”„Serbia: On the Way to EU Accession”„Human Development Indices and Indicators: 2018 Statistical Update”„2018 Social Progress Index”„Global Peace Index”Sabres of Two Easts: An Untold History of Muslims in Eastern Europe, Their Friends and Foes„Пројекат Растко—Лузица”„Serbia: Introduction”„Serbia”оригинала„The World Factbook: Serbia”„The World Factbook: Kosovo”„Border Police Department”„Uredba o kontroli prelaska administrativne linije prema Autonomnoj pokrajini Kosovo i Metohija”оригиналаIvana Carevic, Velimir Jovanovic, STRATIGRAPHIC-STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF MAČVA BASIN, UDC 911.2:551.7(497.11), pp. 1Archived„About the Carpathians – Carpathian Heritage Society”оригинала„O Srbiji”оригинала„Статистички годишњак Србије, 2009: Географски прегледГеографија за осми разред основне школе„Отворена, електронска база едукационих радова”„Влада Републике Србије: Положај, рељеф и клима”„Копрен (Стара планина)”„Туристичка дестинација-Србија”„Висина водопада”„РХМЗ — Републички Хидрометеоролошки завод Србије Кнеза Вишеслава 66 Београд”„Фауна Србије”„Српске шуме на издисају”„Lepih šest odsto Srbije”„Илустрована историја Срба — Увод”„Винчанска култура - Градска општина Гроцка”„''„Винча — Праисторијска метропола”''”оригиналаЈужни Словени под византијском влашћу (600—1025)Држава маћедонских Словена„Карађорђе истина и мит, Проф. др Радош Љушић, Вечерње новости, фељтон, 18 наставака, 24. август - 10. септембар 2003.”„Политика: Како је утврђена војна неутралност, 13. јануар. 2010, приступљено децембра 2012.”„Србија и РС оживеле Дејтонски споразум”„Са српским пасошем у 104 земље”Војска Србије | О Војсци | Војска Србије — Улога, намена и задациАрхивираноВојска Србије | ОрганизацијаАрхивираноОдлука о изради Стратегије просторног развоја Републике Србије до 2020. годинеЗакон о територијалној организацији Републике СрбијеЗакон о државној управиНајчешће постављана питања.„Смањење броја статистичких региона кроз измене Закона о регионалном развоју”„2011 Human development Report”„Službena upotreba jezika i pisama”„Попис становништва, домаћинстава и станова 2011. године у Републици Србији. Књига 4: Вероисповест, матерњи језик и национална припадност”„Вероисповест, матерњи језик и национална”„Специјална известитељка УН за слободу религије и вероисповести Асма Јахангир, код Заштитника грађана Саше Јанковића”„Закон о државним и другим празницима у Републици Србији”„Веронаука у српским школама”„Serbia – Ancestral Genography Atlas”Бела књига Милошевићеве владавинеоригиналаGross domestic product based on purchasing-power-parity (PPP) per capita GDP БДП 2007—2013Актуелни показатељи — Република Србија„Попис становништва, домаћинстава и станова 2011. године у Републици Србији Књига 7: Економска активност”Zemlje kandidati za članstvo u EU„Putin drops South Stream gas pipeline to EU, courts Turkey”„„Соко — историјат””оригинала„„Рембас — историјат””оригинала„„Лубница — историјат””оригинала„„Штаваљ — Историјат””оригинала„„Боговина — историјат””оригинала„„Јасеновац — историјат””оригинала„„Вршка чука — историјат””оригинала„„Ибарски рудници — историјат””оригинала„Закон о просторном плану Републике Србије од 2010 до 2020”„Кривични законик — Недозвољена изградња нуклеарних постројења, члан 267”„Б92: Srbija uklonila obogaćeni uranijum, 25. октобар 2011”„Коришћење енергије ветра у Србији — природни услови и практична примена”„Енергија ветра”„Србија може да прави струју од сунца, биомасе, воде и ветра”„Моја електрана и друге ветрењаче”„Биомаса, струја без инвестиција”„Auto-karte Srbije”„www.srbija.gov.rs Статистике о Србији”оригинала„Статистика зе месец децембар и 2016. годину”„Turizam u Srbiji”„Univerzitet u Beogradu: Vek i po akademskog znanja”„Vojnomedicinska akademija: 165 godina tradicije i napretka”Никола Гиљен, Соња Јовићевић Јов и Јелена Мандић: Мирослављево јеванђеље; Текст је публикован у ревији „Историја” и настао је као део научно-истраживачког рада Фонда „Принцеза Оливера”„World music асоцијација Србије”оригинала„World music у Србији”оригинала„Pogledajte: Boban Marković svira u redakciji „Blica”!”„Eurovision Song Contest 2007 Final”„Projekat Rastko, Alojz Ujes: Joakim Vujic”„Унеско”„Списак локалитета Светске баштине”„Guča i Egzit zaludeli svet”оригинала„Sabor trubača GUČA”„Interesting facts about Exit”оригинала„FIFA Association Information”„Serbia women win EuroBasket title, gain first Olympics berth”„Odbojkašice ispisale istoriju – Srbija je svetski prvak!”„Сајт Ватерполо савеза Србије, Освојене медаље”„Сајт ФК Црвена звезда, Бари”„Сајт ФК Црвена звезда, Токио”„Blic:Zlatna Milica! Mandićeva donela Srbiji najsjajnije odličje u Londonu!”„Милица Мандић освојила златну медаљу („Политика”, 12. август 2012)”„Златни Давор Штефанек”„DŽUDO ŠAMPIONAT Majdov osvojio svetsko zlato”„Španovićeva trećim skokom svih vremena do zlata!”„Чудо Иване Шпановић — 7,24 м („Политика”, 5. март 2017)”The Age of Nepotism: Travel Journals and Observations from the Balkans During the DepressionCalcium and Magnesium in Groundwater: Occurrence and Significance for Human HealthComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesБела књига Милошевићеве владавинеоригиналаComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesSabres of Two Easts: An Untold History of Muslims in Eastern Europe, Their Friends and FoesГеографија за осми разред основне школеSerbia: the country, people, life, customsМедијиВодичПодациВлада Републике СрбијеНародна скупштина Републике СрбијеНародна канцеларија председника Републике СрбијеНародна банка СрбијеТуристичка организација СрбијеПортал еУправе Републике СрбијеРепубличко јавно правобранилаштвоууууууWorldCat151202876n851959190000 0000 9526 67094054598-24101000570825ge130919

Barbados Ynhâld Skiednis | Geografy | Demografy | Navigaasjemenu