Rather than buying separate flights from one destination to another, a flexible and sometimes cheaper way of international travel is via Round the world (RTW) tickets. A round the world ticket is a plane ticket allowing you to fly around the world, usually over a period of up to a year and with between 3 and 20 stops at different airports. Computerized e-tickets seem to have reduced this to a maximum of 16 segments.
Round the world tickets usually cost far less than the sum of the one-way tickets between each set of individual stops. (One-way tickets generally cost more than round-trip tickets on full service carriers and may be looked at with suspicion by security or border agents.) These tickets are usually slightly more expensive than a return ticket between destinations on opposite sides of the world (London and Sydney for example), but if you were planning two or more stops then you may find that a round the world ticket is the cheapest option, and allows you at least a side trip. Many travelers plan entire holidays using a round the world itinerary.
As a much more time-consuming alternative, see also Round the world overland.
There are a number of ways to fly round the world. A "real" round the world ticket is issued as a single ticket, and comes with a host of conditions attached.
Because no individual airlines offer truly global service, round the world tickets are often associated with an airline alliance and allow you to travel with any airline that is part of the alliance. The specialist travel agents mentioned below can book these flights and provide alternative deals.
The major alliance RTW offerings available worldwide are:
Star Alliance Round the World Fare With 28 airlines, covering over 193 countries and 1,317 destinations (Nov 2018), this is the champion for sheer number of destinations and easy routing. The pass is available in 29,000-, 34,000- and 39,000-mile versions — in either Economy, Business or First Class — each with up to 15 stopovers. There is also a special "Starlite" Economy-only fare for 26,000 miles, but this is limited to a maximum of 5 stopovers. As in most of these fares, Star's rules require passengers start and end in the same country, but not necessarily in the same city. Some backtracking is allowed, though not over oceans. Backtracking, surface sectors, and transits/connections all count against the mileage total. As for where in the world you can go? Almost anywhere: in addition to the usual suspects, Star has a near-monopoly stranglehold on some regions including Micronesia and the South Pacific. A black spot includes domestic flights within Australia, although there are plenty of international flights to the major cities.
The 15-member Oneworld alliance offers two types of RTWs:
Skyteam Round the World. Long a distant third, Skyteam has gone through a massive growth since 2010 and now bands together almost 20 airlines. Its coverage of China is unparalleled, with four Chinese airlines as members, and Aeroflot ensures that Russia and Central Asia are well-covered. Vietnam Airlines now covers South-East Asia and the Middle East, long a weak spot, now has both Saudia and Lebanon's Middle East Airlines. Mileage and rules are similar to Star Alliance's RTW.
The Great Escapade (dead link: January 2023), 29,000 miles and unlimited stops throughout the Virgin Atlantic, Air New Zealand and Singapore Airlines and SilkAir network — great coverage in South-East Asia and the Pacific, but spotty elsewhere. Backtracking allowed. The maximum number of stops within mileage is about 10, e.g. London - Delhi - Bangkok - Bali - Australia Stop - New Zealand Stop - Fiji or Rarotonga - Los Angeles - London. Prices are good value and start from £1025 including tax. For some reason however, this ticket requires that travel must be commenced in either London UK or Manchester UK which effectively prevents North American purchasers from using a westward routing.
Four Corners. Singapore Airlines, Lufthansa, Air New Zealand, Virgin Atlantic. Similar to Great Escapade, but with better coverage in Europe and worse coverage in South-East Asia.
Discovery tickets. Qantas, Cathay Pacific, Fiji Airways, British Airways, and most Qantas codeshares. This is probably the 2nd biggest selling RTW out of the UK, allowing 29,000 miles and 6 stops. However an extra 1,500 miles can be bought for £100, or 3,000 miles for £200. This choice is a lot cheaper than the Global Explorer and the One World, with similar routings, including Africa and South America, and from £765 plus tax.
World Walkabout Plus tickets. Qantas, Cathay Pacific, Fiji Airways, British Airways, and most Qantas codeshares. This is the biggest selling RTW out of the UK, allowing 29,000 miles and 7 stops - 4 can be in Australia including the point of turnaround - within a wide variety of itineraries using the joint Qantas and British Airways route networks. Basically you're allowed 7 stops (including up to 3 in Australia and 3 in New Zealand) and you must travel out and back via Australasia sticking roughly to the routings of the airlines involved.
Discontinued tickets include Big Planet Tour and World Journey (Flying Dutchman).
Quite a few more sell two-airline RTWs, with some examples being:
These can be cheaper than full alliance RTWs, but your choice of routing is severely restricted and tickets can only be purchased in certain locations, not across the network. Inquire with the issuing airline for details.
If you want to do a long, circular itinerary that isn't quite all the way around the world, there are a number of interesting alternative options also available:
Oneworld Circle Trip Explorer. A do-it-yourself kind of fare where you pay for the number of continents visited (minimum three, maximum four). A stop in Africa is obligatory.
Oneworld Circle Pacific. 22,000 to 29,000 miles around the Pacific Rim, covering Asia, Oceania, North America and South America.
Oneworld Circle Atlantic. 17,000 to 25,000 miles around the Atlantic. Travel is between cities in USA, Canada, Mexico, South America and Europe/Middle East.
Oneworld Circle Asia & South West Pacific. 13,000 to 17,000 miles around Asia and Australasia.
Star Alliance Circle Pacific. Allows you to loop around the Pacific Rim, for a total trip of 22,000-26,000 miles. Excellent coverage in Asia, but in North America you can only visit Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Honolulu and Vancouver.
Circle Atlantic and Circle Pacific fares are also offered by some individual airlines, such as United and Malaysia Airlines.
If you book an intercontinental round trip flight on an alliance airline you are eligible for passes that give discount flights in the destination continent.
It is possible to put together a round-the-world route by combining one-way tickets on various airlines. This is more flexible than restricting yourself to what an alliance offers and, if you get good discounts on some hops, pricing can be competitive. The only practical way to do this — since it requires both knowledge and contacts — is to go to a travel agent who specializes in round-the-world itineraries. These can be found in major cities that are transit hubs — San Francisco, AirTreks London, STA Travel (dead link: January 2023) or roundtheworldflights.com (dead link: January 2023) or Travel Nation, Bangkok, etc. — and many of them also provide services online, such as BootsnAll or Go Fly World Inc. In the Nordic countries and the Netherlands Kilroy Travels does the job.
The booking process can take a few days or weeks depending on how fast you wish to expedite the process and your itinerary. These agents will get parts of your ticket issued by their contacts in other countries or in-house contracts. This can save a lot of money over the airlines, but at the cost of loss of flexibility: rerouting will generally be impossible and missed connections are now your sole responsibility.
Main article: Air travel on a budget
For a long time, budget airlines were limited to intra-regional flights by the range of narrow-body airliners (true no frills airlines virtually always fly a single type of single aisle aircraft) but changing regulations and the increasing range of newer twin engine planes have since opened the trans-Atlantic route to the no-frills model. Keflavik Airport in Iceland may be a good stopping-off point on the trans-Atlantic portion of your journey, but even a direct flight from Europe to North America can be had for €200. One obvious downside is that you'll almost always have to pay extra for luggage. While Africa, Asia, Europe and North America all now have some form of low-cost carrier, they are still scarce inside Latin America and absent on the trans-Pacific routes, so you'll have to luck out on a cheap fare or spend more there.
Conditions for round the world tickets often include:
A RTW "stop" is usually defined as spending more than 24 hours in a place. Changing planes in transit does not count, and you can use this to squeeze in additional brief day visits. Depending on ticketing rules, in a few places with limited flights, it may even be possible to "transit" for several days while waiting for the next flight out.
Planning for a RTW trip requires quite a bit of preparation.
Some ways to get the maximum value from your ticket are:
When choosing your destinations, consider whether an RTW is the best solution for visiting them. As a very rough rule of thumb for gauging costs, assuming a 29,000-mile ticket for US$3,000, one mile of an Economy RTW costs (on average) around $0.10.
Some tips to consider if you need to squeeze in a few more miles:
If you want to fly around the world completely in the Southern Hemisphere, the choice of flights and destinations is limited due to the lack of transoceanic routes. No airline alliance covers all three ocean crossings in the Southern Hemisphere (and SkyTeam covers none of the crossings). However, Star Alliance covers everything except the eastern South Pacific from Santiago de Chile to Tahiti, which is a LATAM Oneworld flight. This flight is not the only option if you want to skip the South Pacific and the west coast of South America. (see below)
If you're starting in North America, Air New Zealand (Star Alliance) has flights from Los Angeles to Tahiti (code share), the Cook Islands, Samoa/Tonga, and Auckland. For Star Alliance members in USA/Canada, getting in and out via Samoa or Tahiti may be the best route.
Your options for each ocean crossing are:
South Pacific
Indian Ocean
South Atlantic
Even for alliance-wide RTWs, the ticket will be issued by one airline. If you need to change a flight leg, it is best to first contact the carrier you will be flying with, and if they can't help, then consult the issuing airline.
After your ticket has been issued, you are typically allowed to change the dates of your flights for free (except the first international leg), but changing the destinations will require a hefty reissuing fee (US$125 for Star Alliance). Flying the same route on another carrier covered by the pass may or may not be possible.
Two big warnings - Never just skip a flight on a RTW ticket or you may find that the seat reservations for your subsequent flights are automatically canceled without warning or notice. It is reported that Cathay Pacific will do this, regardless of whether the future flights are connections for the one that you missed or booked months in advance. If you leave it and try and reconfirm immediately after missing the flight, you stand a very good chance of being put on a wait list because your seats have already been resold. Always call to cancel the flight in advance or phone immediately to reconfirm all flights, regardless of whether the airlines require reconfirmation normally.
Yellow fever vaccinations: Some countries require this even though there are no cases in your home country, the places you've just visited, and where you're headed to. Example: You've just visited Rio de Janeiro and are continuing on to Australia. They require vaccination for anyone who's been to Brazil within the past week, no matter what areas you've been to. Australian tourists who visit Brazil are aware of this, but someone else on a round-the-world holiday may never have heard of such a thing. If visiting countries wholly or partly located in the tropics, check vaccination requirements of every future destination in the world you plan on visiting, noting all previous tropical countries on your itinerary. In some cases, you may be able to reverse your direction of travel to avoid needing any vaccinations. Of course, if you're visiting an endemic area, you should inquire about vaccinations several weeks before leaving home—even if not legally required.