Reader mail: I don’t care where I go, it just has to be cheap

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Reader AJ writes in. His question:

I would like to find an airfare search engine where I can put in an airport and see:

a) Where all the direct flights go and the prices for each.
b) specify “Europe” or “Asia” and see the best prices to countries in those regions.

Why you ask?
We frequently travel last minute, and frequently we do not care where we go, we just like to go. So if we have 5 days with nothing to do and want to go someplace, anyplace, in Europe it would be handy to see what the lowest price option is.

First off, I admire your flexibility, AJ. Way to go.

Your first criterion, finding only the nonstop flights from a particular departure point, is tough. Some search engines will let you specify nonstops only when you’re searching specific dates, but I can’t find a nonstop limitation on any of the broad, flexible searches I’m familiar with. (Other readers are invited to chime in with suggestions in comments!)

As for looking for the cheapest flight for ultra-flexible destinations, you’re in luck:
The two best options right now are offered by FareCompare and Mobissimo. Travelocity offers an option for domestic travel. ITA Software has a solution, too, but it requires more work and is not as flexible on dates. Here’s the breakdown:

- FareCompare offers a flexible destination search through their “Destination Deal Maps” in the middle of the page. Click on the continent you want, and a list of fares will appear. Clicking on a fare shows you the dates eligible for the fare. Pick a date, then an airline, and the system checks seat availability. FareCompare doesn’t sell tickets, so you’re directed to one of the major online agencies to close the deal.

- Airfare aggregator Mobissimo also offers a search like this, bizarrely located in the “activity search” tab. After selecting your departure point, you can select the desired continent from the pulldown. It’s odd to see “Europe” or “Africa/Middle East” listed as an “activity” right alongside “beaches,” “gambling,” or “opera houses.” But hey, the search works. Like FareCompare, Mobissimo doesn’t sell tickets, but directs you to the seller.

- Both FareCompare and Mobissimo effectively mirror Travelocity’s Dream Maps in format. But Travelocity recently neutered this tool for international travel searches. It still works well for domestic searches, and the site sells tickets directly. (The flexible international search was taken down because the fares didn’t include the fuel surcharges. See here for an explanation.)

- One final idea would be to use ITA Software’s search. ITA’s search requires you to input destinations, but it allows you to string a number of options together. For example, you could enter your departure city, then add a boatload of contending city names or codes to the destination field in the form. Say you’re interested in going to Europe, you could enter something like “ams;fra;par;lhr;dub;mad;cph;ath;rom” — a string of European cities’ airport codes, separated by semicolons. Then widen the destination search by using the pulldown menu to include any airport within 300 miles. Then click “more options” and uncheck “allow airport changes,” to make sure you arrive and depart the same city. That will pull in a LOT of destinations for the dates you want. ITA doesn’t sell tickets, and doesn’t point you to a seller — take your pick.

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2 Responses to “Reader mail: I don’t care where I go, it just has to be cheap”

  1. Anonymous says:

    You actually don’t even have to go to activity search. Just put Europe or Asia or Latin America or Caribbean into the TO: box on the front page and you can see all the cheapest fares users have found in the last two weeks.

    -Mobissimo

  2. Jeremy says:

    AJs question was a great. It’s a very similar scenario to a problem I ran across 2 years ago on a year-long trip around the world. How can you see all the places you can go from where you are at? A sort of spin the glob, put your finger where it lands, and see how much it would cost to go there mentality.

    This became the basis for a new type of travel information company I founded: Travature.com. Specifically on our flight metasearch engine, you can leave everything blank but your departure location, and you’ll see a map driven list of all the airfares we have cached for routes leaving your city. You can then filter the list based on distance, activity tags, and more.

    We also extend this open ended travel discovery concept to a bunch of other rarely integrated aspects of travel (such as Restaurant Reviews, Wiki style Travel Guides, etc). We have just begun building and have a long way to go. But ultimately we think a free, unbiased, flexible trip planner is exactly what travelers like you and me need.
    -Jeremy
    Founder of Travature

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