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How to plan airfare for a Europe trip with multiple stops

Reviewed by Airfare.com Editorial, Complex Airfare SpecialistsLast reviewed

Fare construction for a 2–4 city Europe trip — when to buy one multi-city ticket, when to mix budget legs, and what gateway choice unlocks.

A Europe trip that hits two to four cities is one of the most common itineraries where travelers overpay. The default instinct is a round-trip to a single gateway — usually London, Paris, or Frankfurt — plus a handful of budget flights in the middle. Sometimes that is genuinely the cheapest shape. Often it is not. A multi-city ticket on one or two alliance carriers can be priced lower than the stitched-together version, and a rail leg in the middle can replace a flight entirely for less time door-to-door.

The real decision is which shape of ticket matches your cities, order, and days in each. This guide walks through the four fare constructions worth comparing, when each one actually wins, and the moments where a quick expert review typically changes the answer.

Framing the decision: cities, order, and days in each

Before pricing anything, settle three things. First, which cities are genuinely on the list — two "must see" cities and two "would be nice" cities are a different trip than four cities of equal weight. Second, the order: a Madrid → Barcelona → Paris → Amsterdam path goes one direction and flows naturally; a Madrid → Amsterdam → Barcelona → Paris path backtracks and forces at least one expensive leg.

Third, nights in each city. Two nights is effectively one day of sightseeing after travel time; anything shorter makes a fourth city a net negative because the travel days eat the sightseeing. If the list looks like 2–2–2–2 nights across four cities, cut to three cities at 3–3–2 before you ever open a fare search. The cheapest ticket is the one you do not buy.

Once the cities and order are fixed, there are four fare shapes to compare: single round-trip plus intra-Europe budget legs, a multi-city ticket on one or two carriers, an open-jaw with rail in the middle, and a hybrid. The next sections cover when each wins.

Round-trip to one gateway, plus intra-Europe budget carriers

The default shape: fly round-trip into one major gateway (London, Paris, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Madrid), then use Ryanair, easyJet, Vueling, or Wizz Air for intra-Europe hops. This wins when the transatlantic fare into your chosen gateway is genuinely a deal and the intra-Europe legs are short and flexible.

Where it quietly fails: budget carriers price bags, seat selection, and priority boarding separately, and the "€29 Paris to Rome" fare often totals €90–€130 once a checked bag and a reasonable seat are added. Two budget legs for a family of four can easily run €600–€900 once bags are included — and that is before the out-of-town airport transfers (Beauvais instead of CDG, Ciampino instead of Fiumicino) add another hour and €40–€80 each way.

This shape is strongest when: you have carry-on only, one intra-Europe leg (not three), and the gateway round-trip is at least $150–$250 cheaper than the multi-city alternative. It is weakest for families with checked bags and three intra-Europe segments.

One multi-city ticket on one or two alliance carriers

A multi-city ticket — for example JFK → London, London → Rome, Rome → JFK all on one British Airways/American itinerary — often prices within 10–20% of a simple round-trip, and sometimes below it. The reason: alliance carriers publish fares that specifically price open-jaw and multi-city constructions, and those fares include checked bags and normal seat selection by default.

The pros are real: one ticket means one contract, automatic rebooking if any leg goes wrong, consistent baggage rules across segments, and miles earned on every leg. The cons are also real: fare rules are stricter (change fees apply to the whole ticket, not one segment), and adding a fourth city usually forces a mixed-cabin or mixed-carrier routing that the online search will not assemble cleanly.

This shape is strongest when: three to four cities, at least one leg is long (e.g., Lisbon → Athens), bags matter, and the carrier's network actually covers the cities you want. It is weakest when your cities are all served cheaply by budget carriers on short hops.

Open-jaw plus rail: when trains beat a fourth flight

The most underused fare construction for Europe: fly into one city, fly out of another, and use trains for the middle. Paris → Amsterdam on Thalys is about 3h20 city center to city center; Barcelona → Madrid on AVE is about 2h30; London → Paris on Eurostar is 2h20. Factoring in airport arrival, security, boarding, flight, and ground transfer, a flight on those routes is typically 4–5 hours door-to-door for essentially the same result.

A rail leg replaces a short flight with no checked-bag fees, no airport transfer, and a fare that is usually €50–€120 if booked 2–8 weeks ahead (and €150–€250 close-in). On a Paris → Amsterdam → Berlin trip, one rail leg plus one short flight is often cheaper and faster than two budget flights, and it removes a full travel day from the itinerary.

This shape is strongest when: cities are 200–500 miles apart, high- speed rail connects them directly, and you are price-comparing against a budget flight that uses a secondary airport. It is weakest for long distances (Madrid to Athens, Lisbon to Prague) or when rail requires multiple connections.

A worked rail-vs-flight example: Paris to Amsterdam on Eurostar (the through-running operator since the 2023 Thalys merger) is a 3h20 city-center to city-center trip, with advance fares typically in the €40–€90 range when booked 6+ weeks ahead. The "equivalent" budget flight on Transavia or easyJet between CDG and AMS posts at €60–€110 once a checked bag is added, with a real door-to-door time of 4h–5h once you add the CDG transfer (about 45–60 min from central Paris) and 90-minute airport-arrival buffer. Same outcome, the rail is cheaper, faster door-to-door, and removes the EU 261 / separate-ticket exposure described above. See current rail timing at Eurostar. Ranges are seasonal calibration, not current quotes.

When to call Airfare.com for a Europe multi-city itinerary

Some Europe itineraries are straightforward to price online — a round-trip to London with one short hop to Edinburgh is just a search. Others are genuinely hard to assemble in self-serve tools:

  • Three to four cities with at least one long intra-Europe leg
  • Mixed construction — multi-city ticket plus a rail segment plus a budget flight
  • Families of four or more where per-bag fees on budget carriers flip the math
  • Open-jaw shapes where the outbound and return gateways are in different countries
  • Trips where premium economy on the transatlantic leg is priced unusually close to main cabin

In those cases, a phone review with an Airfare.com specialist typically surfaces fare constructions and carrier combinations that do not appear in standard online flows — and the review itself usually takes under ten minutes.

Frequently asked questions

Is a multi-city ticket always more expensive than a round-trip plus budget flights?
No, and that is the common misconception. A multi-city ticket on one alliance carrier often prices within 10–20% of a simple round-trip, and once checked bags, seat selection, and airport transfers are added to the budget-carrier legs, the multi-city ticket is frequently cheaper overall — especially for three or more cities with any checked luggage. The round-trip-plus-budget shape really only wins for carry-on-only trips with one short intra-Europe hop.
Which European city is usually the cheapest transatlantic gateway?
It varies by season and origin, but London (LHR, LGW) and Paris (CDG) are typically the most competitive from the US East Coast due to volume. Frankfurt, Madrid, and Amsterdam can beat them in specific weeks — Iberia often has strong Madrid fares, and KLM/Delta sometimes underprice Amsterdam. The real rule: do not lock in a gateway before pricing. A $200 cheaper fare into Amsterdam plus a cheap rail leg to Paris often beats a direct Paris round-trip.
When should I use trains instead of a fourth flight?
When the cities are 200–500 miles apart and connected by high-speed rail. Paris–Amsterdam, Barcelona–Madrid, London–Paris, Rome–Florence–Milan, and most German city pairs are faster door-to-door by train than by plane once you factor in airport time. Trains also remove checked-bag fees and secondary-airport transfers, which is where budget flights quietly get expensive. For longer distances (Madrid to Athens, Lisbon to Prague), a flight is usually the right call.
What is the risk of stitching budget flights to a separate transatlantic ticket?
If the transatlantic leg is delayed or canceled, the budget flight is a separate contract — no automatic rebooking, no protection, and the budget carrier will almost never waive a rebooking fee for a missed connection on a different ticket. On a single multi-city alliance ticket, all legs are protected together. For tight connections or mission-critical dates (a booked tour, a cruise departure), the single-ticket premium is worth paying.
When is a phone-assisted booking worth it for a Europe trip?
When the itinerary has more than two moving pieces. Three to four cities, mixed carriers, an open-jaw with rail in the middle, a family of four with checked bags, or a long-haul leg where premium economy is priced unusually close to main cabin — in any of those, a ten-minute call with an Airfare.com specialist typically surfaces fare constructions and carrier combinations that self-serve tools do not assemble. For a single round-trip to one gateway, a standard search is fine.