Flight leaves from Cairo to Dubai just after midnight, but getting in from Saudi Arabia on non-connecting flight the same day
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We are traveling roundtrip from the US to Cairo through Dubai (on Emirates), but during the latter part of our stay in Egypt we're flying over to Saudi Arabia for a few days (going in to Jeddah and out from Medina). Because our Cairo to Dubai flight leaves just after midnight (12:25am) and we're returning from Saudi Arabia the day before we leave, we were hoping not to have to spend the night in Cairo before our Dubai flight.
I have not booked the Cairo-Saudi Arabia tickets yet, but I'm wondering how close of a window between arriving in Cairo from Saudi Arabia and leaving to Dubai is too close. One flight on Saudi Airlines gets into Cairo at 6:55pm, leaving us about five and a half hours until our Cairo to Dubai flight. Is that OK, or is it too risky?
short-connections middle-east
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We are traveling roundtrip from the US to Cairo through Dubai (on Emirates), but during the latter part of our stay in Egypt we're flying over to Saudi Arabia for a few days (going in to Jeddah and out from Medina). Because our Cairo to Dubai flight leaves just after midnight (12:25am) and we're returning from Saudi Arabia the day before we leave, we were hoping not to have to spend the night in Cairo before our Dubai flight.
I have not booked the Cairo-Saudi Arabia tickets yet, but I'm wondering how close of a window between arriving in Cairo from Saudi Arabia and leaving to Dubai is too close. One flight on Saudi Airlines gets into Cairo at 6:55pm, leaving us about five and a half hours until our Cairo to Dubai flight. Is that OK, or is it too risky?
short-connections middle-east
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
We are traveling roundtrip from the US to Cairo through Dubai (on Emirates), but during the latter part of our stay in Egypt we're flying over to Saudi Arabia for a few days (going in to Jeddah and out from Medina). Because our Cairo to Dubai flight leaves just after midnight (12:25am) and we're returning from Saudi Arabia the day before we leave, we were hoping not to have to spend the night in Cairo before our Dubai flight.
I have not booked the Cairo-Saudi Arabia tickets yet, but I'm wondering how close of a window between arriving in Cairo from Saudi Arabia and leaving to Dubai is too close. One flight on Saudi Airlines gets into Cairo at 6:55pm, leaving us about five and a half hours until our Cairo to Dubai flight. Is that OK, or is it too risky?
short-connections middle-east
We are traveling roundtrip from the US to Cairo through Dubai (on Emirates), but during the latter part of our stay in Egypt we're flying over to Saudi Arabia for a few days (going in to Jeddah and out from Medina). Because our Cairo to Dubai flight leaves just after midnight (12:25am) and we're returning from Saudi Arabia the day before we leave, we were hoping not to have to spend the night in Cairo before our Dubai flight.
I have not booked the Cairo-Saudi Arabia tickets yet, but I'm wondering how close of a window between arriving in Cairo from Saudi Arabia and leaving to Dubai is too close. One flight on Saudi Airlines gets into Cairo at 6:55pm, leaving us about five and a half hours until our Cairo to Dubai flight. Is that OK, or is it too risky?
short-connections middle-east
short-connections middle-east
edited Dec 27 '17 at 15:25
user67108
asked Dec 27 '17 at 5:32
Ryan
1112
1112
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1 Answer
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Travelling on separate tickets is always a risk. If a flight is delayed and you miss a connecting flight, then you are on your own as far as arranging alternative transportation (although travel insurance might help). You will also likely need to re-collect your bags in Cairo and re-check them for the next flight, which also means passing through immigration which will take time.
In general, 5.5 hours should be plenty of time. There is always the risk that the inbound flight will be significantly delayed, but it would need to be an extensive delay to leave you with insufficient time to make the connection.
A better option may be to contact Emirates and see if you can change your return flight to start in Jeddah, and go directly from there to Dubai. There will likely be a fee associated with this change, but you might find that it works out cheaper than buying the flights separately. This will mean one less flight, and no risk of being left to fend for yourself if something goes wrong.
Unrelated to the above, plan to get to Jeddah airport at least a few hours before your flight. I flew out of it a few weeks ago and lets just say it's not one of the world better airports...
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Travelling on separate tickets is always a risk. If a flight is delayed and you miss a connecting flight, then you are on your own as far as arranging alternative transportation (although travel insurance might help). You will also likely need to re-collect your bags in Cairo and re-check them for the next flight, which also means passing through immigration which will take time.
In general, 5.5 hours should be plenty of time. There is always the risk that the inbound flight will be significantly delayed, but it would need to be an extensive delay to leave you with insufficient time to make the connection.
A better option may be to contact Emirates and see if you can change your return flight to start in Jeddah, and go directly from there to Dubai. There will likely be a fee associated with this change, but you might find that it works out cheaper than buying the flights separately. This will mean one less flight, and no risk of being left to fend for yourself if something goes wrong.
Unrelated to the above, plan to get to Jeddah airport at least a few hours before your flight. I flew out of it a few weeks ago and lets just say it's not one of the world better airports...
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
Travelling on separate tickets is always a risk. If a flight is delayed and you miss a connecting flight, then you are on your own as far as arranging alternative transportation (although travel insurance might help). You will also likely need to re-collect your bags in Cairo and re-check them for the next flight, which also means passing through immigration which will take time.
In general, 5.5 hours should be plenty of time. There is always the risk that the inbound flight will be significantly delayed, but it would need to be an extensive delay to leave you with insufficient time to make the connection.
A better option may be to contact Emirates and see if you can change your return flight to start in Jeddah, and go directly from there to Dubai. There will likely be a fee associated with this change, but you might find that it works out cheaper than buying the flights separately. This will mean one less flight, and no risk of being left to fend for yourself if something goes wrong.
Unrelated to the above, plan to get to Jeddah airport at least a few hours before your flight. I flew out of it a few weeks ago and lets just say it's not one of the world better airports...
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Travelling on separate tickets is always a risk. If a flight is delayed and you miss a connecting flight, then you are on your own as far as arranging alternative transportation (although travel insurance might help). You will also likely need to re-collect your bags in Cairo and re-check them for the next flight, which also means passing through immigration which will take time.
In general, 5.5 hours should be plenty of time. There is always the risk that the inbound flight will be significantly delayed, but it would need to be an extensive delay to leave you with insufficient time to make the connection.
A better option may be to contact Emirates and see if you can change your return flight to start in Jeddah, and go directly from there to Dubai. There will likely be a fee associated with this change, but you might find that it works out cheaper than buying the flights separately. This will mean one less flight, and no risk of being left to fend for yourself if something goes wrong.
Unrelated to the above, plan to get to Jeddah airport at least a few hours before your flight. I flew out of it a few weeks ago and lets just say it's not one of the world better airports...
Travelling on separate tickets is always a risk. If a flight is delayed and you miss a connecting flight, then you are on your own as far as arranging alternative transportation (although travel insurance might help). You will also likely need to re-collect your bags in Cairo and re-check them for the next flight, which also means passing through immigration which will take time.
In general, 5.5 hours should be plenty of time. There is always the risk that the inbound flight will be significantly delayed, but it would need to be an extensive delay to leave you with insufficient time to make the connection.
A better option may be to contact Emirates and see if you can change your return flight to start in Jeddah, and go directly from there to Dubai. There will likely be a fee associated with this change, but you might find that it works out cheaper than buying the flights separately. This will mean one less flight, and no risk of being left to fend for yourself if something goes wrong.
Unrelated to the above, plan to get to Jeddah airport at least a few hours before your flight. I flew out of it a few weeks ago and lets just say it's not one of the world better airports...
answered Dec 27 '17 at 7:20
Doc
66.5k3156253
66.5k3156253
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