Two separate tickets for connecting flights

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I am a Philippine passport holder. I will be flying from the Philippines to Cluj Napoca, Romania in the next few months.

To save money, my employer will be booking two separate tickets for my flight. So it goes:

  • Flight 1: Manila to Istanbul (using Ticket A) Phil Airlines.

    Claim Luggage, Lay over at Istanbul for 5 hours (not planning to leave the airport).

  • Flight 2: Istanbul to Cluj Napoca, Romania (using Ticket B) another airline.

My question is do I need to get a Turkish Visa or entry clearance for my transit at Istanbul?

I already have my Romanian Visa and Working Permit and all documents needed for my stay in Romania.



Best Answer

For what you describe, you will need a Turkish Visa because with two separate Itineraries and Tickets, it's not a connecting flight and you are not a Transit passenger.

You have a flight from Manila to Istanbul. Then you have a flight from Istanbul to Romania. So, on arrival at IST, you will have to clear Turkish Immigration, collect your luggage, clear Customs, then check in and check your bags with the next airline.

Even if you don't check bags, you likely will still have a problem since Philippine Airline will only see you going to IST and should insist on you having a valid Turkish Visa, otherwise, they are technically transporting an inadmissible person.

This is how it works pretty much everywhere, not just IST. Travelers from certain countries, France for example, can do this since French Passport holders can travel to Turkey visa-free. Philippine Passport holders cannot.

There is one possible scenario where this will work:

  1. Philippine Airlines has an Interline Agreement with your onward carrier that includes baggage.
  2. Philippine Airlines will accept proof of onward travel in lieu of a Turkish Visa because of point #1 and can link your records.
  3. Turkey's pre-flight electronic manifest screening allows Philippine Airlines to board you without Visa information because of point #1 and point #2.



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Can I book two separate connecting flights?

There are two different types of connecting flights. There are those that are included as one route on your ticket and scheduled by the airline or OTA, and then there those which you plan yourself and book separately, known as self-connecting flights.

Do you need another ticket for connecting flight?

A: It depends, but the general rule is NO. Some airlines will through check baggage onto separately ticketed flights, but some won't (even if both tickets are with the same airline). Some airlines will take pity if your delay is due to them, but others don't.

Are connecting flights on one ticket?

Fly on a single ticket when you need to connect flightsTypically, any connecting itinerary you arrange on a single ticket conforms with whatever connecting times apply. That's true even on tickets that involve two airlines, as long as those airlines have interline agreements.

What does it mean when the airline says separate tickets?

A new update introduces the option to search for separate tickets, meaning that Google will search individual segments \u2014 even if that means booking from different services.



Connecting Flights *Explained* - Backpacking For Beginners Ep. 5




More answers regarding two separate tickets for connecting flights

Answer 2

From TAV

Transfer Passengers:(International Transfer Passengers With An International Connection Flight) A boarding card is issued for the passenger (if not issued in the country of origin) at the transit desk of the relevant handling company on the Arrivals floor. The passenger does not go through passport control. Instead, he/she directly proceeds through the transit area into the International Departures area. Baggage will be automatically transferred to the connecting flight.

No passport control means no visa checking, means no visa required.

  • However I am concerned by your Claim Luggage :)

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