How to coordinate airplane tickets?












1















I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between DFW and BUD.



What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.










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    1















    I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



    I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



    The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between DFW and BUD.



    What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.










    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    xxbbcc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1








      I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



      I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



      The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between DFW and BUD.



      What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.










      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      xxbbcc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I'm sorry if this is a duplicate question (or a trivial one) - I don't know what to search for (my searches for the question title only bring back mathematical answers).



      I'm planning on dropping off my daughter with my grandparents for the summer break and returning at the end of summer to pick her up.



      The problem is, I'm not familiar with the ordering process - I bought simple 2-way tickets in the past but in this case she needs one return ticket for the whole summer and I need 2 separate return tickets, one at the beginning of summer (for the drop-off) and another at the end of the summer (to pick her up). Obviously, the leaving / returning dates must coincide on the tickets and I'd want her to sit next to me on the flights. The trips are between DFW and BUD.



      What is the easiest way to get such an arrangement? I don't think this is supported on sites like Travelocity and the like.







      air-travel tickets bookings airlines






      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      xxbbcc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      share|improve this question







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      xxbbcc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question






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      asked 1 hour ago









      xxbbccxxbbcc

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      New contributor





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          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          You could proceed in two different ways:




          • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

          • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).


          The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



          However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



          If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






          share|improve this answer































            1














            The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:




            • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

            • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.


            The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






            share|improve this answer
























            • I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

              – Greg Hewgill
              1 hour ago













            • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

              – xxbbcc
              1 hour ago











            • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

              – chx
              36 mins ago





















            0














            This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



            First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



            To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



            enter image description here



            The results look like this.



            As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






            share|improve this answer


























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              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes








              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              2














              You could proceed in two different ways:




              • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

              • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).


              The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



              However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



              If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                You could proceed in two different ways:




                • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

                • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).


                The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



                However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



                If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  You could proceed in two different ways:




                  • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

                  • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).


                  The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



                  However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



                  If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.






                  share|improve this answer













                  You could proceed in two different ways:




                  • Make three separate bookings: one for your daughter and two for you. You end up with three bookings DFW-BUD-DFW.

                  • Make two separate bookings: one for you two for the flights on which you will be travelling together, and one for you for the flights on which you will be travelling alone. You end up with two bookings: DFW-BUD-DFW (2 people) and BUD-DFW-BUD (just you).


                  The advantage of the second method is that you can ensure your daughter and you will be sitting next to each other, since you are booking the tickets for both of you in the same step.



                  However, it might be worth comparing prices between the two methods, because in general trips originating in Dallas are not necessarily equally priced to trips originating in Budapest, so you might end up saving money with the first method.



                  If you do decide to make three bookings, book your daughter's and your ticket directly consecutively to ensure you get the seats that you want.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 1 hour ago









                  MophotlaMophotla

                  47218




                  47218

























                      1














                      The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:




                      • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

                      • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.


                      The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

                        – Greg Hewgill
                        1 hour ago













                      • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

                        – xxbbcc
                        1 hour ago











                      • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

                        – chx
                        36 mins ago


















                      1














                      The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:




                      • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

                      • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.


                      The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

                        – Greg Hewgill
                        1 hour ago













                      • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

                        – xxbbcc
                        1 hour ago











                      • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

                        – chx
                        36 mins ago
















                      1












                      1








                      1







                      The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:




                      • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

                      • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.


                      The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.






                      share|improve this answer













                      The best way I've found to make this kind of booking is either:




                      • Get a travel agent to do it for you, they can "link" separate tickets and arrange seating, or

                      • Decide which airline you want to fly, call the airline booking line, and work through it with them on the phone.


                      The travel agent option is probably a lot less headache than talking to an airline booking agent directly.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 1 hour ago









                      Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill

                      27.4k373102




                      27.4k373102













                      • I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

                        – Greg Hewgill
                        1 hour ago













                      • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

                        – xxbbcc
                        1 hour ago











                      • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

                        – chx
                        36 mins ago





















                      • I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

                        – Greg Hewgill
                        1 hour ago













                      • Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

                        – xxbbcc
                        1 hour ago











                      • All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

                        – chx
                        36 mins ago



















                      I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

                      – Greg Hewgill
                      1 hour ago







                      I had to look up where BUD was. Halfway across the world, perhaps on multiple airlines, I'd definitely call a travel agent.

                      – Greg Hewgill
                      1 hour ago















                      Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

                      – xxbbcc
                      1 hour ago





                      Going to BUD with Lufthansa / BA / AA is pretty easy - usually with a single stop.

                      – xxbbcc
                      1 hour ago













                      All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

                      – chx
                      36 mins ago







                      All three alliances do BUD-DFW, easily. *A will transfer in FRA or YYZ, OW in PHL or LHR, ST in CDG most likely. I also see wacky cross alliance routes (LO to JFK, AA to DFW) which I seriously doubt to be bookable.

                      – chx
                      36 mins ago













                      0














                      This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



                      First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



                      To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



                      enter image description here



                      The results look like this.



                      As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






                      share|improve this answer






























                        0














                        This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



                        First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



                        To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



                        enter image description here



                        The results look like this.



                        As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          0












                          0








                          0







                          This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



                          First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



                          To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



                          enter image description here



                          The results look like this.



                          As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.






                          share|improve this answer















                          This started as a comment on Mophotla but it expanded so much it needs be an answer.



                          First, the two bookings trick is a great trick.



                          To expand on the three bookings booking process: search with whatever engine you prefer but book with the airlines directly. I checked Air France, British Airways, Air Canada and all of them offer seats after booking any time before check in for a fee. I heartily recommend subscribing to Expertflyer -- for five dollars a month you can look at the seat map before booking:



                          enter image description here



                          The results look like this.



                          As a footnote, towards Budapest I found it much, much better to have a short flight first in North America then the long one. Waiting hours in the morning in Europe after the overnight transatlantic flight is brutal. I absolutely refuse to do this and check into a hotel instead if my routing is such.







                          share|improve this answer














                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer








                          edited 34 mins ago

























                          answered 40 mins ago









                          chxchx

                          38.4k483190




                          38.4k483190






















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