By far the priciest when it came to last-minute fares, FlightNetwork was also the only site that couldn’t locate a direct flight to Japan even with a full six weeks’ notice. Yes, it found among the lowest last-minute fares for Miami–Rio and Philly–Rome, but it really dropped the ball on L.A.–Tokyo. Fares within 1% of one another were considered equal.įlightNetwork, a Canadian online travel agency (you’ll have to do your own currency conversions), makes our top 10 for the first time-but its results were all over the place. We then used a complicated, weighted scoring system for each route search that rewards two points to any site that finds the best fares, one point for second-best, nothing for average results, a negative point for high prices, and minus two for the sites that returned the worst fares. Airlines may think such routings make for viable plans, but we don’t. We have no time for, um, “creative” itineraries that would be hell to fly-so we discarded results that increased total travel time by more than half through excessively long layovers, too many stops, or flying way out of the way just to change planes. We threw in a curve ball (Denver to New Delhi) and even included a flight with no North American legs (London–Barcelona) to see how well each contestant handled Europe‘s wilderness of low-cost carriers. We covered major gateways (NYC to LAX, Miami to Rio) and secondary ones (Philadelphia to Rome). We tried both last-minute flights (leaving the coming weekend) and APEX fares (booked six weeks out). We tested 19 sites on the same 28 itineraries.
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