Route notes
Why this routing works
This round-the-world routing moves steadily east from Geneva through Istanbul, Singapore, Bali, Seoul and Tokyo before crossing the Pacific to Kahului, then resumes by air from Las Vegas to Miami and back to Geneva. The sequence avoids backtracking across Asia and places the longest stop, 14 nights in Denpasar Bali, in the middle of the trip, with shorter 2- to 3-night city stays on either side.
The ticket structure includes an open segment between Kahului and Las Vegas, shown by the surface break in the routing. That means the Kahului-Las Vegas portion is handled overland or separately from the RTW flight ticket, while the ticketed air routing continues from Las Vegas to Miami. This is a practical way to combine a Hawaii stop with onward U.S. travel without forcing every movement onto one flight ticket.
At 8 weeks total, the timing is balanced between shorter connection-oriented stops and longer stays. Istanbul and Singapore are each set at 3 nights, Seoul at 2 nights, Tokyo at 9 nights, and Kahului at 6 nights before the final domestic U.S. and transatlantic sectors. In business class, this kind of multi-continent itinerary can make the longer long-haul sections more manageable while keeping a clear eastbound flow back to Geneva.
With departure in June and pricing in the sold range of USD 11,815 to 18,023, this is a higher-complexity RTW built around multiple regions and one intentional surface sector. It suits travelers who want a single itinerary framework for the long-haul backbone, while leaving flexibility for one self-managed segment in the United States.
