LUFTHANSA’s JOURNEY PLANNER Lets You Plan Your Trip Door-to-Door

LUFTHANSA’s JOURNEY PLANNER Lets You Plan Your Trip Door-to-Door

 

Lufthansa’s latest online app, Journey Planner, gives travelers a turn-key resource when it comes to planning the routing on a given trip. It is currently in its BETA version but available to use by the public.  Expect more features and updates soon!

With Journey Planner, all that you need to do is to enter your origin and destination and the app will calculate various routing options based on your location, including all the Star Alliance flights that are available to you as well as ground transportation information such as bus and rail options.

What I really like about this app are the routing options that it suggests.

Sometimes when I work with readers who are planning their Lufthansa flights, we look at a very narrow choice of options. For example a reader recently needed help routing on LH from Chicago to Frankfurt but could not find award seat availbility. It took an email or 2 to have it dawn that why not position to an LH flight out of a different gateway (Washington DC in this case) and be able to book the desired First Class Seat.  Journey Planner now helps you do this. It brings in a bit of ‘outside the box’ thinking when it comes to route options and helps you potentially plan a better trip!

 

I’ll use my upcoming trip to Munich and Salzburg next week to demonstrate Journey Planner’s abilities:

First, Here is The Journey Planner Home Screen where you enter your origin and destination:

a screenshot of a website

After entering Grand Rapids to Salzburg, the following screen comes up.  I chose the multi-hop option so that I can pick a specific gateway:

a map of the world

You’ll notice the itinerary recommendations in the box to the left of the map.   Journey Planner does a very good and exhaustive job of providing a variety of options.  For example, it actually gave me recommendations to depart from other airports instead of Grand Rapids (for example Detroit and Chicago) along with options via Amtrak and even bus to Washington DC….Shudder that thought! 🙁     But Journey Planner delivers on its promise to provide options that are sometimes overlooked.

Next, I clicked on the Washington DC part of the itinerary and the following screen came up:

a map of the world

You’ll see the options that I now have from Washington DC to Salzburg, Austria.   I can A: Fly to Salzburg using United, Lufthansa, Austrian or Brussels.  B:  I can fly to Munich and take a train  C:  Fly to Zurich and take a train or D: Fly to Frankfurt and take a train.  I choose the fastest path, and select A:  Flying to Salzburg:

a screenshot of a computer

You’ll see at this point that I am provide a myriad of options for flights from Washington DC that will ultimately get me to Salzburg.   I cut off a bit of the box, but in the lower right hand corner, there is a link to search for fares, making the booking process easy from here.

Had I chosen option B, flying to Munich and taking a train to Salzburg, I would have the following suggested itinerary:

a map of a train

 You’ll notice Journey Planner this time suggested United, Lufthansa, Brussels or SAS as airline options to get to MUC, then from Munich it tells me which specific train to take to Munich’s main train station so that you can transfer to the train to Salzburg.

When I click on the Munchen Ost link from above, it will give me specific train information from Munich to Salzburg, including which train services serve Salzburg, along with a convenient link to look at timetables and to actually book your train pass.   I love the one-stop concept of this!

So from Munich to Salzburg:

a screenshot of a map

And that’s it!  In a few short minutes and several clicks, I’ve been able to build an itinerary that had given me every reasonable option to consider as part of my planning.

As you can see, Journey Planner turns out to be very powerful tool due to it’s intelligence when it comes to creating routing options.   But what makes Journey Planner really valuable, is how easy it is to use and the creative, outside-the-box logic that it demonstrates.

I think this tool can be great for someone who travels a similar route frequently may want to try something different but was never aware of the options or for the first time traveler who has no idea what their options are and can use Journey Planner to build their entire trip.

I suggest playing with this app to become familiar with its ability.  It will definitely introduce you to new ways of getting from point A to Z and perhaps let you discover something new along your journey!

If you have any questions, issues or feedback on Journey Planner, please forward them to me (or leave a comment) so that I can forward them to the Lufthansa team that is responsible for this concept.

LUFTHANSA’s JOURNEY PLANNER Lets You Plan Your Trip Door-to-Door

Lufthansa Flight Disruptions Possible in France Tomorrow

If you have net yet heard, a variety of Air Traffic Control Unions in Europe were threatening work stoppages tomorrow which would obviously lead to stress for passengers throughout the continent.

Fortunately most unions have called off the work stoppages but leave it to a few French unions to continue with plans for strikes.

Most European airlines will likely experience flight disruptions tomorrow. Lufthansa has suggested that it may need to cancel flights operated to and from Marseilles and Lyon, however they believe that flights to and from Paris’ Charles de Gaulle should remain unaffected.

If your plans include flights involving France, you may want to contact our airline to determine what your options are.

LUFTHANSA’s JOURNEY PLANNER Lets You Plan Your Trip Door-to-Door

LUFTHANSA Launches Business Fare Sale To USA Ex-Germany

 

Lufthansa has launched a seasonal Business Class Fare Sale for travel between Germany and the USA.    Fares are quite attractive and start as low as €1888  between Munich and Boston and reach as high as €2749 for flights between Munich and Los Angeles.   The fare covers all of Lufthansa’s NORTH AMERICAN destinations, so Mexico City and Canadian cities are involved in the fare promotion.

What is nice about this fare sale is that it covers the main Holiday travel periods of Thanksgiving (23-30 November) , Christmas/New Year (23 December – 2 January) and even Easter for 2014 (12-27 April).

The terms are not to complicated.   28 days advance ticket purchase and a Saturday night stay is required.   Tickets can be rebooked for €240 but are non-refundable.

 

For those of you expecting a fare sale for travel starting in the USA, I expect that one will be announced in a matter of days, if not sooner.    So far Lufthansa has launched Premium Class sales from Great Britain and mainland Europe, so the USA is next in line for Holiday Travel deals.

LUFTHANSA’s JOURNEY PLANNER Lets You Plan Your Trip Door-to-Door

Lufthansa Updates Capacity Projections – Less First Class Seats Planned

 

Lufthansa recently provided an update regarding its fleet and seating capacity for the near future.  According to this Bloomberg article and coming as no surprise, Lufthansa looks to increase capacity at the expense of First Class seats.

According to the article, Carsten Spohr who run’s LH’s passenger airline division addressed analysts in London and provided projections for the next 2 years regarding capacity along with other minor updates:

  • Capacity (number of seats available) will see a net increase of 1% for 2013.   In 2014, LH projects capacity to increase by 5% followed by an additional 4% increase in 2015 and a further 3% increase for 2016.    This gain will come from the elimination of First Class cabins on certain routes to Africa, Canada and India.
  • Capacity increases will also come as more A380 and 747-8i aircraft are added to the fleet over the coming years while smaller aircraft like the A340 are retired from service.  I would suspect that the new Premium Economy seat that is planned for rollout next year will take up a fair amount of space that is freed up by removing the 8 First Class seats from long haul aircraft as well as increasing the amount of  2-class aircraft within the fleet.
  • Also as part of Spohr’s update, it looks like Sao Paolo will soon see the 747-8i.  My guess is it will be ahead of the World Cup scheduled for June and July 2014.    It may be just a matter of waiting for Boeing to deliver the next one.
  • He also commented on a potential tie up with Air China and an expand LH’s relationship with ANA.

 

None of this should come as a major surprise since these moves have been widely expected and discussed for several months.

 

LUFTHANSA’s JOURNEY PLANNER Lets You Plan Your Trip Door-to-Door

LUFTHANSA offering €20 / £15 Vouchers On Future Travel

 

In case you missed the Lufthansa emails earlier today, they are giving away voucher codes that are good for future travel if you book a ticket by Sunday, 6 October.

The promotion works as follows:  Book a Lufthansa flight originating in Great Britain and you will receive a £15 voucher code with your booking confirmation that you can then apply to a future Lufthansa operated flight.

If you are a resident of the ‘continental’ EU, you will receive a €20 voucher after you book a ticket for travel within Europe. However travel must originate from Germany.

The vouchers will be awarded for bookings made through 6 October  and MUST BE APPLIED by 31 October to a subsequent booking.  The valid travel period for a fare purchased used the voucher is between 2 October 2013 and 31 March 2014.  All flights must be operated by Lufthansa ‘mainline’ or regional partner such as Cityline or Eurowings.

 

Click here to be taken to the Great Britain offer

Click here to be taken to the EU offer