1) Think about the entry point
Sometimes it makes more sense to fly into Lisbon, Madrid, Paris, Rome, or London and continue internally instead of forcing the final city first.
Searching flights to Europe should not be just opening a search engine and grabbing the lowest fare. What really makes the difference is understanding route, timing, arrival airport, connections, seasonality, and the kind of trip you want to build. This page is here to turn a random search into a smarter decision — and then guide you to the right next step: compare, book, or build the strategy with me.
Europe is not a single destination. It is a continent with strong hubs, different airlines, multiple entry points, and city combinations that completely change the cost and practicality of the itinerary.
Sometimes it makes more sense to fly into Lisbon, Madrid, Paris, Rome, or London and continue internally instead of forcing the final city first.
High season, holidays, summer, Christmas, and local events affect pricing, availability, and the overall experience.
A first trip, an urban Eurotrip, a couples trip, rail travel, a road trip, or slow travel all require different searches and different airports.
Everyone reaches Europe planning from a different stage. Some are still looking for inspiration, others are organizing the itinerary, and others are ready to search and book.
This is the moment to understand what kind of trip makes the most sense for you: classic Europe, iconic cities, a summer route, a romantic trip, or a mix of destinations.
This is the practical part: deciding which country to enter through, how many days to stay, how to combine cities, the best timing, and which hubs make more sense for your travel profile.
Once the trip logic is clear, it becomes much easier to compare airfares, book hotels, and move forward with a more confident and well-structured purchase.
These hubs usually work well as a starting point, depending on your travel style and on what you want to combine afterward.
They are usually strong entry points thanks to airlift, an easier language curve, and the flexibility to combine Portugal, Spain, and onward connections across Europe.
They make sense for travelers who want to start directly with iconic destinations and build a more classic, urban, or romantic itinerary.
They are especially useful if you want a multimodal logic with trains, short flights, or a more efficient route between countries.
Excellent when the trip includes the UK or when urban experience matters more than operational simplicity.
This helps you avoid buying only because of the fare and later discovering that the itinerary logic is weak.
If you already understand the trip logic, now it makes sense to open the search engine and compare fares. At this stage, the main next step is to search for your flight.
Use the search engine to compare routes, dates, and airlines. If the trip logic is already well defined, this is the right moment to move into search and find the combination that fits your itinerary best.
If you want help choosing the best entry point, the right city combination, the flight logic, and how to fit all of that into your travel profile, this is the most natural next step.
Especially if this is your first Eurotrip, if you want to optimize several cities, compare countries, decide between rail and air, or build a more premium and well-structured trip.
If you prefer, I can also help you shape this trip in a more personalized way, thinking through route, cities, pace, and the flight logic that best fits your case.
After comparing flights, it is worth continuing through destinations, hotels, and planning tools so you can book the trip with more confidence.
Open the countries and regional hubs to turn flight research into a clearer travel plan.
Use the Europe hub to move from inspiration into a more structured and searchable trip plan.
Go back to the editorial layer and compare more countries, cities, and travel styles before you book.