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Round the World
Am thinking of booking RTW flying BC. I have been looking at doing this booking on the Star Alliance web site I would appreciate comments as to whether this is the best place to do it. Thanks
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If you are looking for a paid ticket: yes.If you are inexperienced it might be better to use a specialized travel agent.
You will also find a lot of information in this forum. |
Originally Posted by Unterwegs
(Post 30887801)
If you are looking for a paid ticket: yes.If you are inexperienced it might be better to use a specialized travel agent.
You will also find a lot of information in this forum. For what I want to do right now it is quoting CAD $12,000.00 in BC. I am going to look at this from SEA, perhaps the USD amount will be less. |
Originally Posted by sfo
(Post 30887345)
Am thinking of booking RTW flying BC. I have been looking at doing this booking on the Star Alliance web site I would appreciate comments as to whether this is the best place to do it. Thanks
Originally Posted by sfo
(Post 30888133)
Will be doing award travel, sorry I forgot to mention this in the OP
What ffp's do you have ff miles with? What rules do they have for awards? Many ffp's now do not allow stopovers on awards, so will be point to point Consider these Award booking services - a list and some reviews Edit OP changed post 3 from award to paid as I was replying https://www.staralliance.com/en/round-the-world |
If it was award travel it would be through UA I imagine. I have 1,3M miles
Thanks Mwenenzi, for the link above, that is the link I am looking at for paid travel. |
Unsure if Star still have RTW mileage based tickets
Typical? https://www.airnewzealand.co.nz/round-the-world-fares https://www.airtravelgenius.com/roun...-tickets/#star <snip> 5. Star Alliance Round The World Tickets Star Alliance offers 3 mileage based Round-The-World tickets – with a maximum of 29,000 miles (RWSTAR1), 34,000 miles (RWSTAR2) and 39,000 miles (RWSTAR3). These are available in economy, premium economy, business class and first class. <snip> With 1.3M UA ff miles I would be looking to spend some. They will not increase in value. |
Yes, I know and at my age, I can't take them with me. Maybe a BC flight to heaven :-)
I prefer to use the miles for European BC trips from Vancouver. Anyway thanks for your advice with the trip I have sort of planned would fall under the RWSTAR1, I might look at PE also. |
Look at different starting points. Last time I checked Japan and Korea were the best points. The base price depends on the starting points, taxes and fees depend on the routing. You could use miles to position there. You have one year after the first flight to finish the ticket.
Generally I find the award RTW are a relatively bad value (not sure about the UA program) and also very difficult to find space for. Paid tickets allow a lot of flexibility (free date changes, routing changes for a reasonable fee) and space is easy to find. |
If you are going to fly to Asia again within the next year, I would recommend using your miles to fly from SEA to NRT/HND, then purchasing your STAR RTW starting in Japan.
Use the RTW to travel Asia/Africa/Europe or wherever you intend to travel, then back home to SEA; and use the last leg SEA-Japan to start your next trip if within the year. This will be much cheaper than starting in the USA. |
Unless there has been a change, the Star Alliance website RTW tickets always come out on Lufthansa ticket stock. If you are looking for United mileage you may earn a fair bit more if the ticket is issued by UA. The ticket stock is on the carrier with the first long haul overseas segment. If you call United they can also issue the ticket themselves provided they have the first long haul segment. It would definitely be best to use the Star Alliance online tool to plan what you want, check the mileage and fare, and then provide this to your travel agency or airline (especially if you are trying to maximize mileage earning). Otherwise LH has always given me great service and I would pick them to issue the ticket over anyone except United.
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I found the *A RTW site to be a good start for planning my itinerary and estimating costs. For the booking itself, I wrote my itinerary and options down in an email for SQ and then called them. They will take some time to book and quality of agents vary greatly (some have never booked a RTW for eg) and I imagine this is the same for other partners. So tell them exact flights and times, and book early to ensure availability. There are also many itinerary rules you need to be aware of, so read the RTW TnC doc first: https://www.staralliance.com/en/round-the-world?view=tc |
In addition to the excellent advice above, note that there are more restrictive booking classes now, than previously. This makes *A RTW a little harder to book, and much harder to change.
I don't believe there is any upfare option (to pay more) if you can't get the booking class you need (eg Z for UA) |
Where would I look to book a paid RTW ticket in Y? TIA |
Originally Posted by Paulchili
(Post 31360956)
Where would I look to book a paid RTW ticket in Y? TIA |
Originally Posted by Unterwegs
(Post 31361756)
You can either use the link 2 posts above yours or use a specialized travel agent. Personally I prefer dealing with an TA since I usually change the RTW once or twice. A good TA is well worth the fees in such a situation.
I have tried the above link but I don’t seem to be able to get through to the end - not sure what I am doing wrong. Perhaps dealing with an agent is best. |
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