Is it Better to Book Independently or Use an Aggregator?

Youst19

New member
I'm trying to plan a trip that involves flying into Tokyo, taking the train down to Kyoto, and then flying out of Osaka to head over to Seoul before finally returning home. Trying to piece these flights together directly with the airlines is getting complicated and expensive. Do you find that third-party booking sites and travel aggregators actually save money and hassle for complex, multi-city trips, or is the risk of misconnections too high?
 

Fehourempard

New member
I did a similar trip through Southeast Asia last year. I found the flights using a search engine but then went to the individual airlines to book. It took more time, but I felt safer knowing that if a flight was delayed, I was dealing directly with the carrier.
 

Zucososh

New member
Planning a multi-leg trip definitely requires some strategic booking. When I was organizing my gap year travels across South America, coordinating regional flights with international departures was a puzzle. I spent a lot of time looking at Cheapair reviews while trying to decide if I should use a single platform to handle all the segments or book each one individually. I ended up using a mix of both strategies. Sometimes an aggregator offered a significantly cheaper combination of budget carriers for short hops, but for the long-haul flights across continents, sticking to major airlines provided more predictable schedules.
 
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