reader Posted September 6, 2023 Posted September 6, 2023 From VN Express National flag carrier Vietnam Airlines continues to increase flight frequency on routes to Europe, Australia, and China, thereby restoring nearly 90% of its pre-pandemic international flight network. From September 23, it will increase the frequency of flights between Hanoi and Beijing from three to four weekly on Tuesdays, Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays. At present, the airline is still operating one daily flight on the routes from Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City to China's Guangzhou and Shanghai. From October 29, 2023, Vietnam Airlines will increase the frequency simultaneously on many routes to Australia and Europe. The number of flights between Hanoi and Melbourne will increase from two to three weekly on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays. At the same time, the airline will launch a new direct flight from Ho Chi Minh City to Perth from December 7, 2023, with three round trips per week. Flights to the U.K. will increase from five to seven flights per week, including four from Hanoi on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays and three from Ho Chi Minh City on Mondays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. In addition, the route to Germany will have seven flights per week from the current six, with flights departing from Hanoi daily. Flights between Ho Chi Minh City and France will increase from three to four flights per week on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. vinapu, alvnv, TMax and 1 other 3 1 Quote
TMax Posted September 6, 2023 Posted September 6, 2023 Looking forward to having direct flights to Ho Chi Minh, I have only flown Vietnam Airlines on domestic routes but I thought back then they were quite good (once they got rid of the old Tupolev planes). reader 1 Quote
vinapu Posted September 6, 2023 Posted September 6, 2023 It may open new way of getting to Thailand - through Vietnam. By coincidence yesterday I checked pricing from where I'm to Hanoi and compared them with Bkk ones for 3 random dates in Nov , Jan and Mar . First time in living memory they were cheaper by 100-200 $ reader and TMax 2 Quote