Article: How I Save Money by Flying Business Class from Cairo

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In this article, Wilson explains the practical considerations involved in booking cheap Business Class tickets originating in Cairo.


You can leave a comment or discuss this topic below.
 

I did it on the same ticket on Egypt Air to Egypt Air whch arrived and departed in T3 and the process was easy as described above. Dont need a visa if on same ticket.

For separate tickets, I would definitely stay the night near the airport and an eVisa (although the system is very buggy...mine got processed but +1s on same application didn’t...got hers from Egyptian consulate in Sydney in the end) is necessary. Getting a Visa on arrival is essentially handing over Us$50 in cash on arrival and is the recommended way bar rhe Qs mentioned in the article.

I personally wouldn't start a cheap J ticket ex Cairo (and I would sugggest only the more travel savvy people try this) but would look at one of the other airports mentioned. The Egypt Air lounges are terrrible btw.

If you were to buy a cheap ticket ex Cairo, stay a few nights in Cairo albeit a very busy chaotic city....go to the new Egyptian museum, the Pyramids, Sphinx etc....they are truly magnificent!
 
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Compared to booking a return ticket from Oz to Manila on PR, staying a night or two to ensure connections work and then using another airline to get to London or Europe and back from Europe (avoiding the UK Air Passenger Duty levied on outbound flights), flying via Cairo seems very complicated.

Hardly worth an article.
 
Compared to booking a return ticket from Oz to Manila on PR, staying a night or two to ensure connections work and then using another airline to get to London or Europe and back from Europe (avoiding the UK Air Passenger Duty levied on outbound flights), flying via Cairo seems very complicated.

Hardly worth an article.
I disagree, it is very much worth an article, especially considering that the author actually did it themselves and with the real world transit experience

As asia stopover on different tickets is one option, but this is certainly another, especially if you are in a situation where nesting tickets works out. You could nest a cairo return, between an asia stopover return and use both options.
 
Compared to booking a return ticket from Oz to Manila on PR, staying a night or two to ensure connections work and then using another airline to get to London or Europe and back from Europe (avoiding the UK Air Passenger Duty levied on outbound flights), flying via Cairo seems very complicated.

Hardly worth an article.
Disagree. Although Cairo wouldn’t be my first choice just to save a few bucks, the article highlights the importance of avoiding the Australia tax, and how to work with nested itineraries to save even more.

Personally, I would’ve just flown straight outta somewhere like Oslo to MEL/SYD on reputable carriers like Turkish and Singapore on their long haul business class products for $5-6K. It’s a seamless experience in comparison and would probably earn a similar level of status accrual to a Star Alliance carrier like Singapore Airlines.

And as another nested alternative, EU-BKK/KUL/SIN/CGK for $3-4K with connections to and from Australia.

A word of caution with nested itineraries commencing outside Australia - most credit card travel insurances policies won’t cover you. You must be departing from and returning to Australia. There are many online TIs that will play ball though.
 
In this article, Wilson explains the practical considerations involved in booking cheap Business Class tickets originating in Cairo.


You can leave a comment or discuss this topic below.
Looking at the length of the layover times, even in the business lounge would make that itinerary very unattractive to me ....
 
I walk to hotels that are less than 30 minutes away all the time, but it can be fraught. The exercise is great, but the footpaths always disappear after the carparks. So, you feel like a fish out of water as you try to navigate your bag as close to the verge as you can. I love the look of surprise when you tell the checkin staff that you walked from the airport. They either admire your stamina or just think you are bonkers.
 
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