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The logic is simple: fly to London cheaply (London's always the cheapest). Then connect there to a no-frills airline like Ryanair or easyJet to get to wherever else in Europe you'd like to go. This is almost always cheaper than booking a direct flight on a single airline—but it does require some careful planning.
London is by far the cheapest European city into which you can fly from the U.S. From the East Coast, round-trip airfare can run as low as $170 in winter, never much higher than $350, even in summer *. » more
Add those two facts together, and you may be able to subtract hundreds of dollars from your airfare.
If you don't mind doing some fancy footwork, booking everything yourself, and hauling your luggage around a bit, you can take advantage of this confluence of budget travel truisms to do what I call the Big Ben Switcheroo—fly into London on the cheap, buy a no-frills flight to continue on to Italy.
Here is a practical example, using a sample trip taken from New York, pitting fares gleaned from Expedia against the Big Ben Switcheroo (using that keen $170 roundtrip to London, which was actually available as I'm writing this).
NYC to: | Expedia | Switcheroo | how? | savings |
Rome | $342 | $210 | ($22 fare on Ryanair) | $132 |
The great thing is, though, this way you're not limited to round-trip flights. The Switcheroo is also a fantastic way to arrange a trip that starts in one place and ends in another, since no-frills tickets are always priced one-way. That means you could, say, fly from London to Madrid, tour your way across Mediterranean Europe by a combination of means (trains, more no-frills carriers, rental car, whatever), then fly back to London from Rome—or wherever it is you end up.
Go through the steps for Getting the Cheapest Airfare and pay special attention to Virgin Atlantic (www.virginatlantic.com) and British Airways (www.ba.com), where the best deals usually abide (Virgin is usually the overall price champ; BA usually charges $20 to $40 more, but it flies from more U.S. gateways). » more
See which ones fly to the city you want to visit. Ryanair and easyJet are the obvious ones, as they're based in London, but don’t forget to "reverse-hub" your logic—germanwings may be based at Cologne-Bonn, but it flies to London from there, so if Germany is where you want to be, check their flights out, too. Remember: no-frills tickets are one-way, so there's no need to book both directions with the same outfit. You could fly easyJet out and Ryanair back, and neither would be offended. » more
This is where it gets annoyingly
time-consuming: (a) retrieve luggage, (b) haul luggage to means of transport
to get downtown, (c) ride downtown, (d) haul luggage down into Underground
to switch from the downtown station where you arrived to the one where
you can get transport out to the other airport, (e) ride Underground,
(f) haul luggage up to means of transport out to other airport, (g) ride
to other airport, (h) haul luggage to check-in. (Notice the high degree of "hauling luggage"; See "The Fine Art
of Packing Light".)
The sidebar
on the right lists the prices, travel times, and arrival/departure stations
in downtown London for the fastest and easiest links with and between
London's airports—though note that some "convenient" connections
might run infrequently, such as Heathrow/Luton, which goes only every
two hours.
That should cover travel time between airports, the need to check-in an hour before your ongoing flight, plus a 90-minute cushion in case your first flight lands late. Know that no-frills schedules tend to fall behind schedule more often than major airlines, so allow a slightly longer time cushion between that no-frills back to London and the flight home.
Sometimes, the schedules just don't match up properly—usually on the way home (your flight from, say, Pisa arriving too late in the day to hook up with your return transatlantic flight). This is not a problem if you planned to spend some time in London anyway, but if Big Ben is just a turnstile for you, this extraneous night can be a financial burden—London hotels are expensive!
I’ve done this rigmarole of switching over to no-frills once on British soil myself a few times. I don’t mind the effort to save a few hundred bucks, but some people find this DIY method too annoying and nerve-racking. Please don’t forget to factor in the time involved—and aggravation of schlepping luggage—to get between airports in London before deciding to try it out.
And remember: since you're your own travel agent, ain't no one gonna bail you out if you get off schedule. If one of your flights is delayed and you're not going to arrive in London in time to catch the next one, the other airline couldn't care less and will fly without you. As far as it's concerned, you missed the plane. That's a risk you're going to have to accept—and a good reason to pad the Big Ben Switcheroo plan with an extra day in London on either end, just to be safe.
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