✓Good DealAiFly Score: 52/100Verified 5 Jun 2026 03:36 UTC
Rome to Addis Ababa with Etihad Airways from €490 — 5% below the typical deal price of €515.
✓ Verified DealUpdated 1h ago
🏷️ 5% below typical deal priceTypical deal price: €515
This deal vs. typical deal price for this route — verified 5 Jun 2026 at 03:36 UTC
Tickets from €490 both ways. Checked baggage is not included in the base fare.
✈️ Etihad Airways — AFR 72/100 (premium-light-modern)
In this fare:
- Checked baggage: Not included — paid checked baggage extra
- Onboard meal: Hot meal
- WiFi: Free messaging (members only)
- Cabin: 32″ pitch on 787-9
📍 Routing & layovers
- Outbound — Layover in AUH: 8h 48m 🌆
- Outbound — 🌆 8h 48m in Abu Dhabi — Visit Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque, walk to Louvre Abu Dhabi, or see the Corniche (or Qasr Al Watan presidential palace). 40 min from AUH to the city · Etihad Abu Dhabi Stopover — free hotel night + tour on qualifying fares · EU/UK/USA/CA passports: visa-free 30 days on arrival.
- Return — Layover 6h 50m (Poor connection)
📖 Traveler Resources:
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Rome Fiumicino (FCO) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Rome Ciampino Airport (CIA) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Addis Ababa Bole International (ADD) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Rome Fiumicino (FCO) Airport — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Rome Ciampino Airport (CIA) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Addis Ababa Bole International (ADD) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
Available Dates
Select a date to check live prices on Skyscanner.
23 Jun – 28 Jun€492✈︎ 19h 10m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
24 Jun – 7 Jul€490✈︎ 19h 10m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
25 Jun – 12 Aug€490✈︎ 19h 10m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
Prices verified at time of publication. Always confirm on Skyscanner before booking.
🌍 About Addis Ababa
Addis Ababa rises from the Ethiopian highlands at an altitude that steals your breath before you even leave the runway. The city rewards those who climb Mount Entoto for sweeping views over a capital that calls itself the diplomatic heart of Africa, where the African Union holds court and where more than eighty embassies cluster in neighborhoods that hum with quiet global consequence. In the labyrinth of Merkato, the vast open-air market that has bartered everything from frankincense to electronics for over



