Are 90 minutes layover in Munich Airport and 120 minutes in Heathrow airport enough? [closed]
I will be traveling from Delhi to San Francisco via route DEL - MUC - LHR - SFO.
There are connecting Lufthansa flights from DEL to SFO. Layover time at MUC is 90 minutes and at LHR is 120 minutes. I will land at MUC at 5:30 AM and at LHR at 10:30 AM.
I guess it's single ticket as I bought it from Expedia and its a part of 2-way journey. I hold a US visa and an Indian passport.
Are the layover periods enough for boarding at both places?
layovers lhr short-connections muc
closed as too broad by Kate Gregory, Michael Hampton, David Richerby, Relaxed, Gagravarr Jun 15 '16 at 23:17
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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show 3 more comments
I will be traveling from Delhi to San Francisco via route DEL - MUC - LHR - SFO.
There are connecting Lufthansa flights from DEL to SFO. Layover time at MUC is 90 minutes and at LHR is 120 minutes. I will land at MUC at 5:30 AM and at LHR at 10:30 AM.
I guess it's single ticket as I bought it from Expedia and its a part of 2-way journey. I hold a US visa and an Indian passport.
Are the layover periods enough for boarding at both places?
layovers lhr short-connections muc
closed as too broad by Kate Gregory, Michael Hampton, David Richerby, Relaxed, Gagravarr Jun 15 '16 at 23:17
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
3
this is better as two questions. Each should contain whether this is a single ticket (bought all at once from one airline) and your citizenship, since it affects what lines you go in. That said I think we already have good answers to both.
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:46
5
for Munich: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/12765/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:47
2
for LHR: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66959/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:49
1
Are you booked on a single ticket? If so, then it is the airline's responsibility. They have to book you a ticket with enough time for the transit/transfer window.
– Burhan Khalid
Jun 15 '16 at 17:59
3
As long as it was bought as a single ticket, there are plenty of flights between MUC and LHR and LHR and SFO. The airline will rebook you if you miss a connection. To be honest, with that itinerary, I'd be quite glad to miss a connection!
– Berwyn
Jun 15 '16 at 18:05
|
show 3 more comments
I will be traveling from Delhi to San Francisco via route DEL - MUC - LHR - SFO.
There are connecting Lufthansa flights from DEL to SFO. Layover time at MUC is 90 minutes and at LHR is 120 minutes. I will land at MUC at 5:30 AM and at LHR at 10:30 AM.
I guess it's single ticket as I bought it from Expedia and its a part of 2-way journey. I hold a US visa and an Indian passport.
Are the layover periods enough for boarding at both places?
layovers lhr short-connections muc
I will be traveling from Delhi to San Francisco via route DEL - MUC - LHR - SFO.
There are connecting Lufthansa flights from DEL to SFO. Layover time at MUC is 90 minutes and at LHR is 120 minutes. I will land at MUC at 5:30 AM and at LHR at 10:30 AM.
I guess it's single ticket as I bought it from Expedia and its a part of 2-way journey. I hold a US visa and an Indian passport.
Are the layover periods enough for boarding at both places?
layovers lhr short-connections muc
layovers lhr short-connections muc
edited Jun 15 '16 at 23:51
Ari Brodsky
1,1361923
1,1361923
asked Jun 15 '16 at 17:40
Kumar VikramjeetKumar Vikramjeet
63
63
closed as too broad by Kate Gregory, Michael Hampton, David Richerby, Relaxed, Gagravarr Jun 15 '16 at 23:17
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as too broad by Kate Gregory, Michael Hampton, David Richerby, Relaxed, Gagravarr Jun 15 '16 at 23:17
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
3
this is better as two questions. Each should contain whether this is a single ticket (bought all at once from one airline) and your citizenship, since it affects what lines you go in. That said I think we already have good answers to both.
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:46
5
for Munich: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/12765/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:47
2
for LHR: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66959/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:49
1
Are you booked on a single ticket? If so, then it is the airline's responsibility. They have to book you a ticket with enough time for the transit/transfer window.
– Burhan Khalid
Jun 15 '16 at 17:59
3
As long as it was bought as a single ticket, there are plenty of flights between MUC and LHR and LHR and SFO. The airline will rebook you if you miss a connection. To be honest, with that itinerary, I'd be quite glad to miss a connection!
– Berwyn
Jun 15 '16 at 18:05
|
show 3 more comments
3
this is better as two questions. Each should contain whether this is a single ticket (bought all at once from one airline) and your citizenship, since it affects what lines you go in. That said I think we already have good answers to both.
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:46
5
for Munich: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/12765/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:47
2
for LHR: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66959/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:49
1
Are you booked on a single ticket? If so, then it is the airline's responsibility. They have to book you a ticket with enough time for the transit/transfer window.
– Burhan Khalid
Jun 15 '16 at 17:59
3
As long as it was bought as a single ticket, there are plenty of flights between MUC and LHR and LHR and SFO. The airline will rebook you if you miss a connection. To be honest, with that itinerary, I'd be quite glad to miss a connection!
– Berwyn
Jun 15 '16 at 18:05
3
3
this is better as two questions. Each should contain whether this is a single ticket (bought all at once from one airline) and your citizenship, since it affects what lines you go in. That said I think we already have good answers to both.
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:46
this is better as two questions. Each should contain whether this is a single ticket (bought all at once from one airline) and your citizenship, since it affects what lines you go in. That said I think we already have good answers to both.
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:46
5
5
for Munich: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/12765/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:47
for Munich: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/12765/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:47
2
2
for LHR: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66959/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:49
for LHR: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66959/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:49
1
1
Are you booked on a single ticket? If so, then it is the airline's responsibility. They have to book you a ticket with enough time for the transit/transfer window.
– Burhan Khalid
Jun 15 '16 at 17:59
Are you booked on a single ticket? If so, then it is the airline's responsibility. They have to book you a ticket with enough time for the transit/transfer window.
– Burhan Khalid
Jun 15 '16 at 17:59
3
3
As long as it was bought as a single ticket, there are plenty of flights between MUC and LHR and LHR and SFO. The airline will rebook you if you miss a connection. To be honest, with that itinerary, I'd be quite glad to miss a connection!
– Berwyn
Jun 15 '16 at 18:05
As long as it was bought as a single ticket, there are plenty of flights between MUC and LHR and LHR and SFO. The airline will rebook you if you miss a connection. To be honest, with that itinerary, I'd be quite glad to miss a connection!
– Berwyn
Jun 15 '16 at 18:05
|
show 3 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
(1) Namaste, Berwyn's comment is very astute: on such a long flight, super-popular routes: it will be kind of "normal" if you miss a connection, and it won't matter at all, they'll just put you on another. Your flight is so long you won't even notice if you arrive the odd day after the supposed original arrival time
(2) For Munich no problem
(3) For LHR you must state your arrival/departure terminals
At Heathrow - the most horrific, sickening, soul-destroying anything in the solar system - transfers are often a marthon
(4) Thank God, you DID book on one complete ticket with one airline (right?) You have nothing to worry about, they'll just put you on a next flight if there's a screw-up.
Tip: pick aisle seats
(5) the food is crap on Lufthansa's India->Frankfort legs :/
(6) You should have flown Emirates dude. It's not even more expensive.
If a corporate travel department booked this disaster, you got screwed :/ I'm sorry.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
(1) Namaste, Berwyn's comment is very astute: on such a long flight, super-popular routes: it will be kind of "normal" if you miss a connection, and it won't matter at all, they'll just put you on another. Your flight is so long you won't even notice if you arrive the odd day after the supposed original arrival time
(2) For Munich no problem
(3) For LHR you must state your arrival/departure terminals
At Heathrow - the most horrific, sickening, soul-destroying anything in the solar system - transfers are often a marthon
(4) Thank God, you DID book on one complete ticket with one airline (right?) You have nothing to worry about, they'll just put you on a next flight if there's a screw-up.
Tip: pick aisle seats
(5) the food is crap on Lufthansa's India->Frankfort legs :/
(6) You should have flown Emirates dude. It's not even more expensive.
If a corporate travel department booked this disaster, you got screwed :/ I'm sorry.
add a comment |
(1) Namaste, Berwyn's comment is very astute: on such a long flight, super-popular routes: it will be kind of "normal" if you miss a connection, and it won't matter at all, they'll just put you on another. Your flight is so long you won't even notice if you arrive the odd day after the supposed original arrival time
(2) For Munich no problem
(3) For LHR you must state your arrival/departure terminals
At Heathrow - the most horrific, sickening, soul-destroying anything in the solar system - transfers are often a marthon
(4) Thank God, you DID book on one complete ticket with one airline (right?) You have nothing to worry about, they'll just put you on a next flight if there's a screw-up.
Tip: pick aisle seats
(5) the food is crap on Lufthansa's India->Frankfort legs :/
(6) You should have flown Emirates dude. It's not even more expensive.
If a corporate travel department booked this disaster, you got screwed :/ I'm sorry.
add a comment |
(1) Namaste, Berwyn's comment is very astute: on such a long flight, super-popular routes: it will be kind of "normal" if you miss a connection, and it won't matter at all, they'll just put you on another. Your flight is so long you won't even notice if you arrive the odd day after the supposed original arrival time
(2) For Munich no problem
(3) For LHR you must state your arrival/departure terminals
At Heathrow - the most horrific, sickening, soul-destroying anything in the solar system - transfers are often a marthon
(4) Thank God, you DID book on one complete ticket with one airline (right?) You have nothing to worry about, they'll just put you on a next flight if there's a screw-up.
Tip: pick aisle seats
(5) the food is crap on Lufthansa's India->Frankfort legs :/
(6) You should have flown Emirates dude. It's not even more expensive.
If a corporate travel department booked this disaster, you got screwed :/ I'm sorry.
(1) Namaste, Berwyn's comment is very astute: on such a long flight, super-popular routes: it will be kind of "normal" if you miss a connection, and it won't matter at all, they'll just put you on another. Your flight is so long you won't even notice if you arrive the odd day after the supposed original arrival time
(2) For Munich no problem
(3) For LHR you must state your arrival/departure terminals
At Heathrow - the most horrific, sickening, soul-destroying anything in the solar system - transfers are often a marthon
(4) Thank God, you DID book on one complete ticket with one airline (right?) You have nothing to worry about, they'll just put you on a next flight if there's a screw-up.
Tip: pick aisle seats
(5) the food is crap on Lufthansa's India->Frankfort legs :/
(6) You should have flown Emirates dude. It's not even more expensive.
If a corporate travel department booked this disaster, you got screwed :/ I'm sorry.
answered Jun 15 '16 at 20:08
FattieFattie
4,46712063
4,46712063
add a comment |
add a comment |
3
this is better as two questions. Each should contain whether this is a single ticket (bought all at once from one airline) and your citizenship, since it affects what lines you go in. That said I think we already have good answers to both.
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:46
5
for Munich: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/12765/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:47
2
for LHR: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66959/…
– Kate Gregory
Jun 15 '16 at 17:49
1
Are you booked on a single ticket? If so, then it is the airline's responsibility. They have to book you a ticket with enough time for the transit/transfer window.
– Burhan Khalid
Jun 15 '16 at 17:59
3
As long as it was bought as a single ticket, there are plenty of flights between MUC and LHR and LHR and SFO. The airline will rebook you if you miss a connection. To be honest, with that itinerary, I'd be quite glad to miss a connection!
– Berwyn
Jun 15 '16 at 18:05