- Flights are 30% off from choose U.S. cities.
- The deal contains six European locations: Dublin, Berlin, Paris, Copenhagen, London, and Amsterdam.
- With PLAY’s stayover function, passengers also can keep in Iceland on the best way at no additional price.
PLAY, the low-cost Icelandic airline, could have you feeling fortunate this St. Patrick’s Day with their vacation deal. PLAY is providing 30% off flights from the U.S. to seven bucket-lister locations, together with the house of St. Patrick himself, Eire.
The deal applies to flights booked from Baltimore/Washington Worldwide Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), Boston Logan Worldwide Airport (BOS), and New York Stewart Worldwide Airport (SWF). The particular is for flights to Iceland (KEF), Dublin (DUB), Berlin (BER), Paris (CDG), Copenhagen (CPH), London (STN), and Amsterdam (AMS).
Flights will be booked at straight at PLAY.
And there’s much more luck available: PLAY’s 30% off deal will be mixed with their stayover function, which allows vacationers to remain as much as 10 days in Iceland on their strategy to and from their ultimate vacation spot, with none extra price. That permits you to get out of the airport in Iceland and see the nation’s magical panorama earlier than heading off to the rolling emerald hills in Eire or to the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
Flights have to be booked between March 17 and March 23, 2025. Flights from Baltimore/Washington Worldwide Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI) have to be taken April 28 by way of Could 4, 2025, Could 6 by way of 11 2025, and September 7 by way of December 15, 2025. Flights from Boston Logan Worldwide Airport (BOS) and New York Stewart Worldwide Airport (SWF), have to be taken April 27 by way of Could 4, 2025, Could 6 by way of Could 11, 2025, Could 13 by way of Could 31, 2025, and September 7 by way of December 15, 2025.
This deal is routinely utilized to the airfare, however isn’t deducted from taxes, charges, extra companies, and provider fees. The low cost will probably be seen throughout reserving and availability is on a primary come, first serve foundation.