⭐Excellent DealAiFly Score: 67/100Verified 29 Apr 2026 13:02 UTC
Rome to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia with EY from €474.
✓ Verified DealJust published
Tickets from €474 both ways. Checked baggage is not included in the base fare.
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Rome Fiumicino (FCO) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KUL) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Rome Fiumicino (FCO) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KUL) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📖 Traveler Resources:
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Rome Fiumicino (FCO) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Rome Ciampino Airport (CIA) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KUL) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
🌍 Destination Guide
📍 Malaysia travel guide
📚 Kuala Travel Guide
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Rome Fiumicino (FCO) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Rome Ciampino Airport (CIA) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KUL) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
🌍 Destination Guide
📍 Malaysia travel guide
📚 Kuala Travel Guide
Available Dates
Select a date to check live prices on Skyscanner.
⚠️ All booking links removed
AiFly automatic review on 29 Apr 2026 at 13:02 UTC found that current prices for every advertised date are over 30% above the published €474 — booking links are no longer accurate.
Prices verified at time of publication. Always confirm on Skyscanner before booking.
Baggage Allowance
📋 Full EY baggage allowance & fees →
👜
Personal Item
Small bag / laptop
✓ Included
🎒
Cabin Bag
8 kg
✓ Included
🧳
Checked Bag
23 kg
✕ Not included
Based on cheapest advertised fare. Always verify on the booking page before purchasing.
🌍 About Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Kuala Lumpur is built around the Petronas Twin Towers, but the trip actually worth making is to Batu Caves, 13 km north: a Hindu shrine set inside a limestone cave, reached by 272 rainbow-painted steps under a 43-metre gold statue of Murugan. The city is a genuine three-way mix of Malay, Chinese and Indian, and you eat accordingly — nasi lemak (coconut rice, chili sambal, fried anchovies, egg) for breakfast, then late-night satay and char kway teow along the Jalan Alor food street. Don't skip a mamak stall, the 24-hour Indian-Muslim cafés where teh tarik, "pulled" frothy milk tea, gets poured arm's-length between cups. It's hot and humid year-round (~32°C); May-July is the driest stretch, but August-September often brings haze from Sumatran fires, and October-December is the wettest.
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