Route notes
Why this routing works
This itinerary is built as a multi-stop transatlantic sequence rather than a single loop: London to New York City, back to London, then an open-jaw return that resumes in San Francisco before continuing across the US to Los Angeles, New York City, Miami, and back to London. That structure works for travelers who need a break in London between two US segments while keeping all flights on one coordinated ticket plan.
The timing is tight but straightforward, with 4 nights in New York City on the first visit, 10 nights in London, then shorter stays of 2 nights in San Francisco, 3 in Los Angeles, 4 in New York City, and 2 in Miami. San Francisco is marked as reached overland after the London stop, so the ticketing logic here relies on an open-jaw between London and the West Coast rather than forcing a same-city restart.
Because the route includes two New York City stays and two London appearances, sequencing matters more than destination count. The transatlantic flights are split across the beginning, middle, and end of the trip, while the later US segment runs west to east before the final Miami-London return. In economy, this kind of multi-stop pricing can make sense for travelers who want several separate flight coupons bundled into one itinerary instead of buying each leg independently.
