✓Good DealAiFly Score: 56/100Verified 26 May 2026 08:54 UTC
Budapest to Manila with Air China from €565 — 3% below the typical deal price of €583.
✓ Verified DealUpdated 2h ago
🏷️ 3% below typical deal priceTypical deal price: €583
This deal vs. typical deal price for this route — verified 26 May 2026 at 08:54 UTC
Tickets from €565 both ways — checked baggage included.
✈️ Air China — AFR 62/100 (full-service)
In this fare:
- Checked baggage: 1 × 23 kg
- Onboard meal: Hot meal
- WiFi: Paid wifi
- Cabin: 32″ pitch on A320neo
📍 Routing & layovers
- Outbound — Layover in PEK: 14h 54m 🌆
- Outbound — 🌆 Long layover in Beijing — an opportunity to explore the city. Most carriers offering this connection allow free stopovers up to 24 hours.
- Return — Layover in PEK: 15h 48m 🌆
- Return — 🌆 Long layover in Beijing — an opportunity to explore the city. Most carriers offering this connection allow free stopovers up to 24 hours.
📖 Traveler Resources:
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport (BUD) — The Complete Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Manila Ninoy Aquino Airport (MNL) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📚 Manila Travel Guide
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport (BUD) — The Complete Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Manila Ninoy Aquino Airport (MNL) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📚 Manila Travel Guide
Available Dates
Select a date to check live prices on Skyscanner.
13 Sep – 11 Oct€565✈︎ 29h 20m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
16 Sep – 20 Oct€580✈︎ 29h 20m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
16 Sep – 13 Oct€580✈︎ 29h 20m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
23 Nov – 29 Dec€585✈︎ 29h 20m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
Prices verified at time of publication. Always confirm on Skyscanner before booking.
🌍 About Manila
Manila pulses with a layered energy found nowhere else in Southeast Asia. At Intramuros, the centuries-old walled city, you can walk cobblestone streets past San Agustin Church and Fort Santiago while calesa horses clatter by. Across the Pasig River in Binondo, the world's oldest Chinatown, smoke rises from wok stations serving hakaw dumplings and arroz caldong while street vendors hawk from colorful jeepneys. The chaotic grid of Ermita and Malate gives way to quieter gardens around Rizal Park, where afternoon light softens the monument to the national hero. Filipino hospitality means every sari-sari shop and neighborhood carinderia opens with a smile, serving plates of adobo and sisig alongside icy halo-halo after sunset, while the city's thriving art scene and rooftop bars reveal a Manila that balances Spanish colonial grandeur with distinctly modern grit.



