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7 answers

no it dosnt because it is a low cost airline meaning that if it flew to europe it would have to pay alot more taxes and prices would go up and the aircraft that they have can not fly that far

2006-11-30 03:03:35 · answer #1 · answered by soccerknocker199 4 · 0 0

Does Jetblue Fly To Europe

2016-11-10 08:49:18 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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RE:
Does JetBlue Airways fly to Europe? Also,who are its airline partners?

2015-08-18 22:49:59 · answer #3 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

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I wouldn't go with a flight with a connection unless there was something else in the deal for me (cheaper fare, better airline loyalty program, or lets me avoid an airport that I do not like, which for me means Dulles, can't stand it and would rather connect anywhere than fly in and out of Dulles). So let's take Southwest out of the mix. Their product or service at least in my book is not good enough to justify a connection, and you said the fares are similar. Comparing US Airways and JetBlue, JetBlue wins on the aircraft hands down; they fly either a newer Airbus, or a really nice Embraer regional jet on this route; these are both comfortable planes. Due to the short duration of the flight-- it's only 350 miles each way-- I don't think you should expect much in terms of drink/snack service or inflight entertainment. You're only in the air for 30 minutes. But the Canadair jet that USAirways flies on this route is easily the least comfortable, most painful plane you can fly and still be on a jet. That's not just the US Airways flavor of the Canadair jet; it's any airline flying that raggedy thing. You will be more comfortable on JetBlue. On the other hand, US Airways has more flights on this route, giving you more convenient choices, both for nonstops and flights with connections. US Airways also has a partner network that, for all intents and purposes, JetBlue does not have. This means if your flight is cancelled, for whatever reason, US Airways may choose to send you on a United or Continental plane, giving you more choices in getting to your destination. If you're flying on JetBlue and need to be rebooked, you'll be rebooked onto a JetBlue flight, and maybe it's 3 days till there's space for you. So in terms of options and convenience, US wins. US Airways has one more advantage: while both JetBlue and US Airways have frequent flyer programs (and you should enroll if you are taking frequent trips, and always stick with the same airline), you can redeem JetBlue miles only on JetBlue. You can redeem US Airways miles on about 20 different airlines. If you earn miles all year long, you can go BUF-Las Vegas on JetBlue or you can use your US Airways miles to go to London, Hong Kong, Sydney, and pretty much anywhere that any airline in the Star Alliance network goes. It can take a little research to find available seats on trips overseas (took me about 8 hours topiecee together a trip from DC-LA-New Zealand-Sydney and back but it was all in Business Class on either United or Air New Zealand) but you can get some *really* nice flights for free. Do not waste your frequent flier miles on domestic travel unless it's an exceptional deal. You can still consider Southwest-- lots of people love them-- but you're forcing yourself into a connection every time you fly and you have the same limitations of no partners, and same Southwest-award-travel-only hitch, so I don't really see it worth going with them. I can't tell you if convenience is more important to you than comfort, or vice-versa. A lot depends on how often you will be flying. If you go once a month, JetBlue is probably better; if you go more often, US is probably better. But if you want to collect airline miles and someday go to Europe or Asia, then US is the only choice here. Now all you have to do is read this info and decide what is most important to you: comfort, convenience, or free tickets. Let us know what you pick!

2016-04-05 05:46:54 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

JetBlue does not fly to Europe at all. Its only international destinations are a couple of Caribbean islands (Bahamas, Aruba, Bermuda and Dominican Republic). And it does not have any airline partners. However, I fly constantly and rarely find JetBlue to be the cheapest option.

2006-11-30 01:33:40 · answer #5 · answered by Mike R 6 · 0 0

JetBlue does not fly to Europe and it does not have any airline partners.

2006-11-29 12:53:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Southworst doesn't have official bag fees, but instead upped their fares the equivalent amount. I'll fly Alaska Air every time, followed by JetBlue if necessary. Alaska has partnerships with other airlines, so more options should anything go wrong. Southworst doesn't. You can get assigned seating with Alaska (and JetBlue), not with Southworst. Alaska Air didn't win the JD Power award for best airline three years in a row for nothing.

2016-03-22 14:32:39 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no they don't but you can try other airlines that are in Europe of the following ryanair or easyjet

2006-11-29 13:42:03 · answer #8 · answered by andykpln 4 · 0 0

Thanks for the answers!

2016-08-23 11:41:30 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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