Route notes
Why this routing works
This round-the-world routing starts and ends in Tokyo, moving west through Turkey, Central Europe, Spain, and Morocco before closing the loop back to Japan. The sequence keeps the overland logic tight in the middle of the trip: Ankara and Istanbul are paired first, then Budapest, Prague, and Vienna run in a compact Central European stretch, followed by three stops in Spain and a final stop in Marrakech.
At five weeks total, the pacing mixes shorter city stays with a few longer anchors. The shortest stop is Granada at 1 night, while Madrid and Marrakech carry the longest stays at 7 and 9 nights respectively. That structure can help balance a route with many flight sectors by concentrating more time at the back half of the itinerary rather than keeping every stop at the same length.
From a ticketing standpoint, this is a multi-stop economy RTW with nine stopovers between departure and return. Spain is handled as a three-stop sequence before the routing crosses to Morocco, which is a practical way to keep those segments grouped rather than breaking up the western end of the trip. October departure timing places the journey in the Oct-Dec season window.
The sold price range on this itinerary was USD 3,288 to 4,305 in economy. Based on the route provided, this sample is best understood as a stop-dense RTW focused on connecting multiple cities in a continuous westbound chain rather than minimizing stop count or maximizing time in only one region.
