What to do when no search engine can find a connection that clearly exists
For about six months now, it seems that flights to Iceland, where I live, from very many places in the US, including where I go to visit my family, just don't show up in any search engine I've tried (Orbitz, Travelocity, Expedia, SkyScanner, etc.).
When I try to book a flight, it only finds flights that go through the UK or mainland Europe for $3,000 and up. However, there are dozens of flights from the east coast of the US to Reykjavik (out of IAD, BOS, JFK, and several others), and those flights tend to cost about $3-500 and depart late at night. And there are of course thousands of ways to get to any of those cities by early afternoon with many hours to make the connection, but the search engines just can't find them.
For example, I'm trying to fly from Little Rock (LIT) to Reykjavik (KEF) on December 28. Putting that into Orbitz directly finds the cheapest flight as $3450 going LIT-DFW->LHR->KEF.
Ideally, I'd fly though DC, but it turns out not to matter. I'll use IAD in DC for the following examples though.
If I try a multi-city search (LIT->IAD, IAD->KEF), it comes up with a $3700 fare that goes (LIT->IAH->IAD->LHR->KEF).
OK, so let's just try getting to DC only. Searching for LIT->IAD comes up with a quite reasonable LIT->DFW->IAD itinerary for $230, landing at IAD at 12:15 PM.
Now let's try IAD->KEF (for which I know there's a direct Icelandair flight). Sure enough, it finds that direct flight for $363 departing IAD at 7:45 PM.
Even if I try to explicitly specify exactly which flights to take (LIT->DFW->IAD->KEF), it still routes the last leg through Heathrow and rings up a total of $5500.
I can just book two entirely separate trips, and if nothing goes wrong, it costs about $600. But this means that I'm on the hook for the connecting flight if something goes wrong and they strand me somewhere. And of course I won't be able to just check my bag all the way through, avoid going through security a second time, etc.
Does anyone have any advice? I'm not sure who to contact -- is it Icelandair, Orbitz, someone else? If I wade through phone support somewhere, is this a thing they can fix either before or after I buy tickets? Or do I just suck it up and book separate flights?
Best Answer
Most air travel websites do not look for a “connection” in the same way than mapping apps look for an itinerary on the road or train search engines look for train connections. They look for a connection that can be priced and booked (either directly or through a third party or travel agent). This adds a lot of complexity and many non-trivial constraints that are not always easy to understand for outsiders like you and me.
If for some technical or business reason a particular combination cannot be booked (no cooperation or “interlining agreement” between different airlines, one flight is fully booked, incompatible fares, connection under the minimum transfer time, etc.) there is no connection as far as those search engines are concerned, even if there are planes leaving and arriving from the relevant airports.
One exception I am aware of is rome2rio. It can show connections between different transportation modes and find tickets that cannot be booked together from one provider. Sure enough, it does find many Icelandair-domestic US flight combinations for your route. But you would need to buy tickets for each leg of the journey separately, which can have many unpleasant consequences (see other questions on this site for more on this).
I don't know what the problem is in this particular case (Icelandair does have partnerships with United or Air Canada…) but since your question suggests those connections disappeared from most search engines at the same time and Rome2Rio can still find them, it's likely to be related to changes in commercial agreements between Icelandair and other airlines.
But even for “regular” connections, the complexity is such that no website can exhaustively search all combinations and it's often possible to find some connection that does not show up in a given website's results.
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Answer 2
I've done the 'international connection through JFK that I couldn't book online'. I managed to get the flights booked over the phone, and the agent said that he was surprised that it couldn't be done either.
(I was specifically going through JFK to meet a friend and then fly the rest of the way)
I was lucky that I had two hours for my connection, as the problem was that they were going through two different terminals, and they didn't have a shuttle between them. Luckily, it wasn't that far of a walk, I didn't have a checked bag to worry about, and I managed to get through security in a reasonable amount of time. (and that the person behind me told me that I dropped my passport out of my shirt pocket when security insisted that I remove the shirt)
So, if you ever decide to force the booking through, be aware that you might have to collect your checked bag and then re-check it, be re-scanned through security, and possibly need a taxi or similar to get from one gate to the other ... and you have no guarantee if you miss the connection because the first leg came in too late to be able to check your bag and such.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Kamaji Ogino, Vlada Karpovich, Andrea Piacquadio, Vlada Karpovich