HicksRA Posted July 4, 2020 #1 Share Posted July 4, 2020 I’m looking at a Sydney to Hawaii TP but have no idea and I’m a little concerned about airfare prices before I book one. I know A2S prices on Europe TAs are normally very reasonable but have never booked a flight to the South Pacific. Are the prices to Australia and Hawaii reasonable as well? Or astronomical? Any recent cruiser have a ballpark figure as to what your fare was? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ourusualbeach Posted July 4, 2020 #2 Share Posted July 4, 2020 One benefit with Air 2 Sea is you can book refundable rates. If you see the price drop you call and get the new fare. The flights don’t need to be paid until final payment which allows to time to also watch the airlines directly and book with them if you see a great deal pop up. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
long4acruise Posted July 4, 2020 #3 Share Posted July 4, 2020 (edited) 2 hours ago, HicksRA said: I’m looking at a Sydney to Hawaii TP but have no idea and I’m a little concerned about airfare prices before I book one. I know A2S prices on Europe TAs are normally very reasonable but have never booked a flight to the South Pacific. Are the prices to Australia and Hawaii reasonable as well? Or astronomical? Any recent cruiser have a ballpark figure as to what your fare was? We were previously booked on the cancelled B2B Transpacific & Hawaii sailings for April/May 2020. Nonstop flight on United (LAX-SYD) via Air2Sea was $576 pp. Later, after flight was ticketed, we upgraded to business class directly thru United website for $600 and 30K points. Premium Economy was only $189 pp additional. Our friends' return flight from Hawaii (via LAX) to the Washington DC area (HNL-IAD) on United was less than $400. Flights from Vancouver via Seattle to DC (our itinerary) were $268. Hope this helps! We truly missed those great two sailings; hopefully can book again in 2022 in either direction. Edited July 4, 2020 by long4acruise omitted word. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HicksRA Posted July 4, 2020 Author #4 Share Posted July 4, 2020 12 hours ago, long4acruise said: We were previously booked on the cancelled B2B Transpacific & Hawaii sailings for April/May 2020. Nonstop flight on United (LAX-SYD) via Air2Sea was $576 pp. Later, after flight was ticketed, we upgraded to business class directly thru United website for $600 and 30K points. Premium Economy was only $189 pp additional. Our friends' return flight from Hawaii (via LAX) to the Washington DC area (HNL-IAD) on United was less than $400. Flights from Vancouver via Seattle to DC (our itinerary) were $268. Hope this helps! We truly missed those great two sailings; hopefully can book again in 2022 in either direction. That’s very helpful. Thank you! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
taglovestocruise Posted July 4, 2020 #5 Share Posted July 4, 2020 We were also booked on the April 2020 Sydney to Honolulu and cancelled. With the flight being 16 hours there was no way I would sit in standard economy. We used Air2Sea and the price for economy plus was around $3000 for two and then we needed to add Hawaii to LAX for about $600 additional. Air fare and hotel was more than the cruise price for a deck 12 balcony.. I was actually happy things were cancelled. Lax to Europe has never been over $1600 for two in premium economy. As a side note Air2Sea has always been a pleasure. Several years ago our flight to Rome was canceled the morning of the flight because of a hurricane. 30 minutes on the phone with Air2Sea and we were booked onto a different airline with no additional cost or fees. happy cruising 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SkaterJasp Posted July 8, 2020 #6 Share Posted July 8, 2020 (edited) My previous 3 TransPacific been around $1300 one way for Premium Economy from LAX to SYD via TPE on China Airlines (Taiwanese Airline / part of SkyTeam). They have the same Premium Economy seats as Air France (hard shell seat so if the person in front reclines, it doesn’t recline into your space) The legroom and seat width was similar to a domestic first class seat. Edited July 8, 2020 by SkaterJasp 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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