Four Weekends - One Asean Pass with AirAsia

AirAsia has introduced the “AirAsia Asean Pass” as well as the “AirAsia Asean Pass+” to help frequent flyers travel through the region easily and at consistently great prices. This is a real treat for frequent travellers. While primarily targeted at perhaps Europeans or Americans looking to explore most of Southeast Asia within one month, I think the concept can work out well for Singaporeans too. Just get the basic pass - 1 month. Fly out every Friday night and hop back on Sunday / Monday and you can cover four different Southeast Asian countries in 1 week. The concept is simple: flights are measured in credits — the Asean Pass contains 10 credits, and is priced at SGD209, while the Asean Pass+, at SGD 369, would give you 20 credits. Flights below 2 hours are worth 1 credit, while flights above 2 hours are worth 3 credits. E.g. Singapore to Bandung is 1 credit, while Singapore to Bangkok is 3 credit. You can do a Singapore / Bandung one weekend, followed by Yogyakarta the next weekend, and then head further to Thailand or Cambodia for a longer getaway. This means that every flight through Asean that is available through AirAsia is now much cheaper. AirAsia Group CEO, Tony Fernandes, said, “As a truly Asean airline, we are extremely proud to introduce the AirAsia Asean Pass, which is a product specifically designed to further liberalize and encourage travel among the Asean community. The pass allows us to bridge communities and attract more foreign tourists to the region — it’s the perfect instrument to promote Asean integration.” “We are constantly enhancing the way guests fly with us and the AirAsia Asean Pass is another innovation that we have put in place to make flying more efficient and enjoyable. We are working on additional enhancements that will further benefit guests traveling from non-Asean destinations.” Flight redemption with these passes will not be subjected to processing fees, and Airport charges, taxes, and other fees will be payable separately. It must also be redeemed within a year, and registration for the dates must be made at least 14 days prior to travel. What’s more, you don’t have to keep the passes all to yourself. If you know someone who’s a frequent flyer, you can buy this new form of currency as a gift. It can also be allocated to a different name, so you can buy tickets for your whole family to Bali. This is even better, I can easily use this with my wife for even cheaper travels. The pass was originally intended for sale from January 15, but was postponed in light of the AirAsia Indonesia Flight 8501 crash. The AirAsia Asean passes are especially attractive when you take into account the usual fluctuations of prices. Flights will be available at a fixed-rate to the over 148 routes that AirAsia has to offer throughout the year. That said, blackout periods do apply, which means that you probably won’t be able to use it for those long weekend getaways. The AirAsia Asean Pass and Asean Pass+ credits are redeemable for travel with AirAsia Malaysia (AK), Thai AirAsia (FD), AirAsia Indonesia (QZ) and Philippines AirAsia (Z2) to Asean destinations only.

Comments

Popular Posts