Route notes
Why this routing works
This itinerary is structured as a long-duration westbound multi-stop route starting in Toronto, crossing first to London, then dropping into the Caribbean and continuing through Central and South America before turning north to Los Angeles and onward across the Pacific to Fiji, Australia, and Bali. The sequencing keeps the trip moving in one broad direction rather than repeatedly backtracking between regions.
A key ticketing feature here is the overland gap between Bogota and Lima. The flight ticket covers Toronto to Bogota, then resumes from Lima to Rio de Janeiro, which creates flexibility for the South America section while preserving the larger long-haul structure. That kind of surface sector can be useful when a traveler wants to move between two cities outside the flight ticket without forcing an extra air segment into the fare.
Timing is also a major part of this route. Several stops are built as longer stays, including 30 nights in London, 21 in Bridgetown, 30 in Cancun, 32 in Bogota, 22 in Nadi, and 27 in Melbourne, with shorter transit-style stays in Panama City and Los Angeles. Across 41 weeks in economy, this is a slower-paced itinerary that mixes a few brief connections with multiple month-scale stopovers.
From a booking perspective, this is a complex open-jaw, multi-region ticket rather than a simple circle route. It combines Europe, the Caribbean, Latin America, North America, the South Pacific, Australia, and Southeast Asia on one itinerary, with pricing indicated in the USD 7,101 to 9,295 range depending on exact dates within the July to September season and the September departure pattern shown here.
