Route notes
Why this routing works
This routing moves east from Hamburg through Tokyo, Honolulu, Guatemala City, and Rio de Janeiro before returning to Hamburg, keeping the trip in a single continuous direction rather than backtracking between regions. For a multi-stop ticket, that sequencing is the main structural advantage: it links Asia, the Pacific, Central America, and South America in one fare instead of pricing each long-haul sector separately.
The longest planned stays are front-loaded in Tokyo (18 nights), Honolulu (14 nights), and Guatemala City (21 nights), which gives the itinerary a clear pacing across the 7-week total. Rio de Janeiro functions as the final onward stop before the return to Hamburg, making this a route built around a few extended stays rather than many short connections.
From a ticketing standpoint, this is a business-class MSI itinerary priced from USD 3,846 to USD 5,035 based on the sold route data provided. With an April departure in the apr-jun season, the structure is straightforward for travelers who want a single multi-stop booking covering all major flight segments from origin through return.
Because the route starts and ends in Hamburg, it works as a closed-loop long-haul itinerary rather than an open-jaw plan. That makes the logistics easier to frame around one departure point, one final return point, and a defined stop order across five flown sectors between the outbound and inbound ends of the trip.
