⭐Excellent DealAiFly Score: 60/100Verified 26 May 2026 10:52 UTC
Frankfurt to Chennai with Air India from €527 — 15% below the typical deal price of €620.
✓ Verified DealUpdated 1h ago
🏷️ 15% below typical deal priceTypical deal price: €620
This deal vs. typical deal price for this route — verified 26 May 2026 at 10:52 UTC
Tickets from €527 both ways — checked baggage included.
✈️ Air India — AFR 52/100 (full-service)
In this fare:
- Checked baggage: 1 × 23 kg
- Onboard meal: Hot meal
- WiFi: Paid wifi
- Cabin: 31″ pitch on A320neo
📍 Routing & layovers
- Outbound — Layover 4h 5m (Long layover) ⚠️
- Return — Layover in BOM: 11h 48m 🌆
- Return — 🌆 Long layover in Bombay — an opportunity to explore the city. Most carriers offering this connection allow free stopovers up to 24 hours.
📖 Traveler Resources:
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Frankfurt Airport (FRA) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Frankfurt-Hahn (HHN) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Chennai International Airport (MAA) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Frankfurt Airport (FRA) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Frankfurt-Hahn (HHN) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Chennai International Airport (MAA) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
Available Dates
Select a date to check live prices on Skyscanner.
25 Jun – 14 Jul€527✈︎ 15h · 1 stopSkyscanner →
13 Aug – 17 Sep€540✈︎ 15h · 1 stopSkyscanner →
19 Aug – 17 Sep€540✈︎ 15h · 1 stopSkyscanner →
20 Aug – 16 Sep€540✈︎ 15h · 1 stopSkyscanner →
9 Sep – 17 Sep€540✈︎ 15h · 1 stopSkyscanner →
Prices verified at time of publication. Always confirm on Skyscanner before booking.
🌍 About Chennai
Chennai greets you with the restless energy of Marina Beach at dawn, where locals gather to watch the Bay of Bengal catch fire under the rising sun. In the historic lanes of George Town, colonial-era facades hide bustling markets and hole-in-the-wall eateries serving crispy masala dosas alongside steaming filter coffee. Head to Mylapore to wander past the ancient Kapaleeshwarar Temple, where the scent of jasmine and coconut oil drifts through stone corridors, then settle into an evening program at the Kalakshetra Foundation, where BharatNatayam dancers train by oil lamp in the tradition that has defined Tamil culture for generations. Here, tradition does not perform for outsiders—it simply lives on, in the Carnatic music spilling from apartment windows, in the string of oil lamps carried in evening processions, in the unhurried rhythm that rewards those who slow down and pay attention.



