⭐Excellent DealAiFly Score: 62/100Verified 5 Jul 2026 11:02 UTC
Sydney to Dublin with China Eastern Airlines from A$1114 — 32% below the typical deal price of A$1650.
✓ Verified DealJust published
🏷️ 32% below typical deal priceTypical deal price: A$1650
This deal vs. typical deal price for this route — verified 5 Jul 2026 at 11:01 UTC
Tickets from A$1114 both ways — checked baggage included.
✈️ China Eastern — AFR 59/100 (full-service)
In this fare:
- Checked baggage: 2 × 23 kg
- Onboard meal: Hot meal
- WiFi: Paid wifi
- Cabin: 31″ pitch on A330 / 777 / A350 widebody
📍 Routing & layovers
- Outbound — Layover 6h 15m (Poor connection)
- Return — Layover in PVG: 18h 12m 🌆
- Return — 🌆 18h 12m in Shanghai (Pudong) — Visit the Bund (52 European-architecture trading houses along the Huangpu), walk to Shanghai Tower observation deck at 546 m (632 m total — the tallest building in China), or see the French Concession (Wukang Road / Anfu Road heritage walks) (or Yu Garden + Old City (classical Ming-dynasty scholar's garden, 1559)). 45 min from PVG to the city · 240-hour visa-free transit at PVG covers stops up to 10 days (54+ nationalities, onward to a third country); EU/UK/CA/AU/NZ also have unilateral 30-day visa-free through Dec 31 2026 · EU/UK/CA/AU/NZ passports: 30-day visa-free; USA: 240-hour transit with third-country onward ticket · full layover guide →.
📖 Traveler Resources:
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport (SYD) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Dublin Airport (DUB) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📚 Dublin Travel Guide
✈️ Airport Guides
📍 Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport (SYD) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📍 Dublin Airport (DUB) Master — Terminals, Transport & Tips
📚 Dublin Travel Guide
Available Dates
Select a date to check live prices on Skyscanner.
30 Jul – 17 AugA$1114✈︎ 30h 0m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
2 Aug – 17 AugA$1114✈︎ 30h 0m · 1 stopSkyscanner →
Prices verified at time of publication. Always confirm on Skyscanner before booking.
🌍 About Dublin
Dublin's a literary city in a way you can actually see: it's a UNESCO City of Literature, and the Long Room library at Trinity College — two storeys of dark oak shelving holding the 9th-century Book of Kells — is the sight worth queuing for. Skip Temple Bar; it's been ranked among the world's worst tourist traps, and a pint costs nearly double what you'll pay a few blocks south in the Liberties or Portobello, where the actual local pubs are. Eat a Dublin coddle: sausage, rashers, potato and onion gently simmered (never browned) — an unglamorous 18th-century working-class stew, best in cold weather. Come May or September–October for mild days and thinner crowds. Summer is warmest but priciest and packed; January–February is cheap, grey and wet — go only for the quiet.
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