⭐Excellent DealAiFly Score: 66/100Verified 4 Jun 2026 18:04 UTC
Brussels to Dar es Salaam with Turkish Airlines from €722 — 5% below the typical deal price of €760.
✓ Verified DealJust published
🏷️ 5% below typical deal priceTypical deal price: €760
This deal vs. typical deal price for this route — verified 4 Jun 2026 at 18:04 UTC
Tickets from €722 both ways — checked baggage included.
✈️ Turkish Airlines — AFR 65/100 (full-service)
In this fare:
- Checked baggage: 2 × 23 kg
- Onboard meal: Hot meal
- WiFi: Free messaging (members only)
- Cabin: 31″ pitch on A321neo
📍 Routing & layovers
- Outbound — Layover 2h 50m (Acceptable connection)
- Return — Layover 3h 30m (Acceptable connection)
📖 Traveler Resources:
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Brussels Airport (BRU) — The Complete Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Julius Nyerere International Airport (DAR) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Brussels Airport (BRU) — The Complete Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Julius Nyerere International Airport (DAR) — Terminals, Transport & Tips
Available Dates
Select a date to check live prices on Skyscanner.
2 Feb – 23 Feb€722✈︎ 13h 45m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
2 Feb – 11 Feb€726✈︎ 13h 45m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
2 Feb – 17 Feb€727✈︎ 13h 45m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
2 Feb – 18 Feb€727✈︎ 13h 45m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
2 Feb – 22 Feb€726✈︎ 13h 45m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
Prices verified at time of publication. Always confirm on Skyscanner before booking.
🌍 About Dar es Salaam
Dar es Salaam pulses with the rhythm of the Indian Ocean. Wander through the labyrinthine stalls of Kariakoo Market, where vendors call out over pyramids of cassava, dried fish, and mangoes from the Southern Highlands. At the harbor, wooden dhows bob alongside weathered trawlers, and in the evening the catch arrives at beachside grills—kingfish, prawns, octopus sizzled in coastal pilau. The city stretches along a palm-fringed shoreline, its low-rise streets shaded by bougainvillea, the scent of incense drifting from mosques in the old quarter. In Oyster Bay, candle-lit bistros occupy coral-stone buildings with makuti roofs, while down the coast the sand turns powdery white at the islands reachable by ferry. Its soul is Swahili—sprinkled with Portuguese, Omani, British, and Indian threads woven through its architecture, its slang, and the smoky stalls where mishikaki sizzles over charcoal.



