Are there domestic flights that are cheaper if you instead use an international connection?

Are there domestic flights that are cheaper if you instead use an international connection? - Happy middle aged woman in casual clothes focusing on screen and interacting with smartphone while ironing clothes in light living room of modern apartment

I wonder if there's pairs of cities in some countries where there's a feasible flights between them with international connection? Has to be at least comparable in price and convenience with domestic connections.

Example of this scenario: There's no direct flights between ROV and UFA, but both airports have flights to IST. Theoretically you could fly from Rostov-on-Don to Ufa with Turkish Airlines with Istanbul connection. In practice you won't, because you will be connecting in Moscow. But I wonder if there are places in the world when people fly to their own country by passing through another one.

So I'm looking for a non-trivial traffic/offerings for such travel between two cities, not just a theoretical possibility. It should probably show up on skyscanner (or similar) and be competitive there.



Best Answer

The triangle inequality means that flying A-C-B is always further than A-B; and minimum connection times will also cause problems. So it depends on how you weigh up the merits of ticket price, time required, and convenience (ease of transit airport etc.). For example, I can find prices for flying from Bristol to Edinburgh which are cheaper via Dublin than going direct: but it would inflate a flight time of around an hour to closer to 4, and risks mis-connection.

Supposing there is no direct domestic flight A-B, then an A-C-B via C in a third country will still struggle to compete with all the indirect flights A-D-B where D is in the same country as A and B. The scenarios I can imagine it working out are:

  • Due to a quirk of geography, A and B are much closer to C than any domestic D; hence flights would be quicker (and possibly cheaper, but fare doesn't necessarily correlate with distance)
  • Domestic flights A-D-B are only available on an expensive legacy carrier, whereas a low cost operator (or rival legacy feeding their hub) operating out of C prices much more aggressively to win traffic
  • There are no domestic routings between A and B, nor sensible alternative public transport options

This last I can give an example of, but clearly without access to O&D flow data it can only be hypothetical rather than confirmed as something that people genuinely do. KLM has an extensive network from its hub at Amsterdam to the UK regions, offering links between cities that cannot be flown between domestically. For instance, Glasgow to Norwich can be flown this summer via Amsterdam for less than £150 return and journey times under 3h30 each way. By contrast, an off peak train journey is £138 (although I can see combinations of advance fares that save around £10, and many people have railcards), and takes at best 6h43 each way, requiring four different trains.

Finally, by way of personal anecdote I have actually flown domestically via an international connection. That was London to Bristol via Amsterdam, but for a special flight rather than for any price/time advantage. I took a train to London from Bristol to position for the flights and that was both faster and cheaper, despite booking into a first class carriage!




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Are flights with connections cheaper?

Are connecting flights more expensive? Connecting flights are generally not more expensive than direct ones. In fact, they are generally cheaper as some passengers may wish to pay more in order to get to their destination quicker with a direct flight.

Why transfer flights are cheaper?

In a very basic sense, the airlines try and forecast supply and demand as best as they can for every single ticket, and then price each one accordingly so as to sell for the highest possible profit. This results in price discrimination, or charging different prices for the equivalent seat on an airplane.

Do connecting flights cost more?

The flights that go through connecting airports are dramatically more expensive.

Why is connection cheaper if destination is connecting city?

Re: Why is connection cheaper if destination is connecting city? Competition is the answer. They offer a cheaper fare to undercut other airlines. Since there are no non-stop flights from the NYC area to Naples, everyone has to connect somewhere.



HOW TO FIND CHEAP FLIGHTS - My Best Tips After Booking 500+ Flights




More answers regarding are there domestic flights that are cheaper if you instead use an international connection?

Answer 2

I see flights between Jakarta and Medan, Indonesia that are cheaper if they include a stop in Singapore.

Obviously this will change constantly, but currently a Google Flights search for KNO<-->CGK roundtrip 11/13-11/20 shows a $128 itinerary with a stop in SIN, but $178 for the cheapest domestic flight.

Answer 3

Just wanted to update that a colleague was able to observe LED - IST - KUF flight advertised by Turkish Airlines on some ticket search service. So it is in fact offered. Was it worth it price-wise? Guess not.

Answer 4

This hinges on what your definition of a domestic trip is, but New Caledonia is not independent – independence was rejected in a 2018 referendum – and thus while does not have the same status as Corsica or Martinique it still belongs to France.

New Caledonia’s airport in Nouméa is so far away from metropolitan France (and/or its airport is so small) that there are no direct flights. In theory, a domestic connection to Paris would exist via Papeete (Tahiti, French Polynesia), but SkyScanner does not suggest this as a viable option. Having plugged a random pair of dates, the fastest option uses Air France and one transfer in Narita (Tokyo) while the cheapest option stops in Sydney and Singapore outbound and in Amsterdam and Narita inbound (see attached image).

Flights from Nouméa to Paris

I tried playing around a little more to get a Nouméa–Papeete–Paris flight but even that would not be purely domestic as the Papeete–Paris connections all refuel in California.

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Images: Andrea Piacquadio, Gustavo Fring, Sam Lion, Andrea Piacquadio