Deal! It’s our weekly (well, usually weekly) deal post. Today, we’re taking you from London to Las Vegas for under $400 (under £330), with flights on Lufthansa, Swiss and United. We can also take you to Boston, New York, Los Angeles, Washington DC and a ton more at the same price! This one has some unique characteristics that will give you better value than many of the ones that we see.

Fare Deal | London To Las Vegas For $351 (£288)
London to Las Vegas

London to Las Vegas: The Details

The calendar on Skyscanner looks wide open for flights from London to Las Vegas. I used a week in February, but you have plenty of options to spend some time in Sin City. I like this deal, for a number of reasons:

  • There are a ton of dates available. Just use the calendar feature (as explained here), or, if you have dates in mind, go ahead and use them. Skyscanner is agnostic that way.
  • You will have your choice of time frames, as well. Because there are so many dates open, you can decide if you want to stay three days or three weeks. There are fewer restrictions on this deal than on most that we see.
  • It uses major airlines from the Star alliance carriers. Lufthansa, Swiss and United are all involved.
Fare Deal London to New York NYC $300
London to New York City – $300’ish

London to Other Cities!

Pick a major city, any major city. It’s listed! A few of them are (Gasp!) over $400, but the majority offers match the one to Las Vegas above.

This deal is out of control. $300 return fares to NYC!

The London Eye to the LINQ High Roller in Las Vegas

This is one of the better deals that we’ve seen, in terms of value and availability. I have a feeling that there is a fare ware on this route, so I’m not sure how long they will be around. If you’re interested, I’d hit it sooner rather than later.*

As always, these fares were brought to us by our friends at Notiflyr. Thanks guys!


*Fun fact: Every airline uses letter/number codes for its various fare bucks. In the good old days, before everything was plastered all over the internet, airlines had a unique way of indicating to a competitor that they were displeased with that airline’s fares: They’d start the particular fare code with the letters FU.