Route notes
Why this routing works
This 7-week itinerary uses an open-jaw structure in Europe: fly from New York City to London, make your own overland move to Amsterdam, then continue by air from Amsterdam to Paris, onward to Reykjavik, and back to New York City. That setup works well for travelers who want flexibility between nearby European cities without paying for a backtrack flight.
The longest stay shown is 31 nights in London, which makes it the anchor stop of the route. From there, the sequence stays compact within Western Europe before adding a 5-night stop in Reykjavik near the end of the trip. Finishing with Iceland before the transatlantic return keeps the route moving in one general direction rather than repeating the same long-haul sectors.
Because Amsterdam is marked as reached overland, this ticket is best understood as combining flights with at least one self-arranged surface segment. That can be useful when cities are close together and you want more control over the timing between stops. In economy, the overall fare range of USD 946 to 1,239 keeps the structure relatively simple: one outbound crossing, short intra-Europe flights, and one return to New York City.
With a June departure and an apr-jun season tag, timing is centered on late spring to early summer. For a multi-stop trip of this length, that can make the pacing easier to manage: one long stay up front, a shorter sequence through Amsterdam and Paris, then a defined final stop in Reykjavik before heading home.
