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  1. Reykjavik, by far and large, is the cheapest city to fly to Europe from the US. The problem, however, is that Iceland is far from continental Europe so you would need an additional flight to go anywhere else.

  2. According to OTAs like Omio and engines like Google Flights, these are the cheapest cities to fly into Europe: 7. Frankfurt, Germany Airport: Frankfurt Airport (FRA) 6. Milan, Italy Airports: Malpensa Airport (MXP) or Linate Airport (LIN) 5. Oslo, Norway: The cheapest European city to fly into Scandinavia Airport: Oslo Airport, Gardermoen (OSL)

  3. From Rome just take a train to Naples. For Dubrovnik take a low cost carrier. Flights into Italy are generally cheapest to Rome and Milan. To get to Amalfi it's just a quick flight to Naples or a long train day. To reach Croatia, you could fly to Zagreb then train to Dubrovnik.

  4. Try flying to Finland and tell me it's more expensive. It was consistently around 700 for quite a while about 3 years ago, from Chicago. Dublin is definitely the cheapest in my experience though.

  5. I'm trying to find the cheapest 1 way flight ticket from Sydney, Melbourne or Brisbane, at some time between 15 Mar and 15 April to any part of Europe.

  6. AMS (Amsterdam Schipol) is one of the cheapest to fly into; it's a major hub so if you want to go somewhere from there it's not too hard. If you want to save money, avoid London like the plague. Amsterdam can be cheap if done right; believe it or not, staying in the red light district isn't bad and is a bit cheaper than going to the major hotels.

  7. There's no single airport that's always the cheapest. If you search London, Paris, Amsterdam, Madrid, and Milan, those are normally among the cheapest. But it's usually not that big a difference, so if you want to mainly see Eastern Europe, just pay another $200 to fly to Berlin instead of flying to Madrid.

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