Route notes
Why this routing works
This 12-week itinerary is built as a true eastbound multi-stop ticket, starting in Las Vegas and returning there after 11 stopovers across four broad routing arcs: the Americas, Europe and Africa, the Indian Ocean and South Asia, then Southeast and East Asia. The sequencing keeps the trip moving in one direction rather than backtracking, which is the key to making a long route like this workable in economy.
Most stops are set at eight nights, creating a very even rhythm that simplifies planning on the ground and helps balance longer intercontinental flight segments with full recovery time between departures. Malta is the one longer stay at nine nights, placed before the Cairo and Nairobi segments, so the schedule still reads as a consistent week-plus pattern across nearly the entire journey.
From a ticketing standpoint, this is a complex open-jaw-style multi-stop route with 13 flight points including the return to origin. It links Las Vegas, Lima, Kingston, Luqa, Cairo, Nairobi, Port Louis, Colombo, Singapore, Denpasar Bali, Hong Kong, and Tokyo on a single economy framework, which is often the practical way to hold a route spanning several regions without splitting it into multiple unrelated tickets.
With departure in May, the schedule fits a spring-to-early-summer travel window and spreads the 12 weeks across 11 stopovers at a pace that is ambitious but not rushed. At a sold range of USD 5,233 to USD 6,850 in economy, the route is structured for travelers who want a large number of stops and broad geographic coverage while keeping the trip on one continuous itinerary.
