India: €391 Qatar Airways Flights From Prague (With Luggage)

Neu Delhi, Indien

Oneworld member Qatar Airways is selling cheap flights from Prague to its Indian destinations. Prices start at CZK 10,215 (~€420) for flights to Delhi, including 25 kg of luggage. You can also fly to Amritsar and Kolkata. There’s availability from April until December, but quite low availability during the summer.

Info

Worldwide travel restrictions are in place to slow the spread of Covid-19. We strongly recommend gathering detailed information about the travel and quarantine restrictions that apply to your desired origin and destination.

A good start is the International Air Transport Association (IATA) website. It provides current updates on a country’s immigration policies. Even better, the Covid-19 Travel Regulations Map is one of the most useful tools you can find.

You can fly to the following Indian cities:

The flight times are quite good, and the layover in Doha lets you stretch your legs midway.

The tickets include 25 kg of luggage and 7 kg of hand luggage. All flights would have a layover in Doha.

By the way, we also have some other deals starting in Prague:

Search & Book

You can book these tickets until April 25, 2021. The trips then have to take place between April 7 and November 30 (although availability seems to be very thin during the summer) and take at least 5 days. Furthermore, the outbound flight has to take place from Sunday to Wednesday, and the inbound from Monday to Friday.

You can find the exact availability on Google Flights. As availability is quite high, you can also use our search above, which will redirect you to Qatar Airways’ booking site. Should you have to change your plans, Qatar will refund you the flight in the form of a voucher.

Mileage

The tickets are issued in booking class T. To give you an example, a roundtrip to Delhi would get you:

  • 4,208 Avios + 48 Qpoints on Qatar Privilege Club
  • 4,208 Points on Finnair Plus
  • 4,208 Avios + 400 Elite Points on Iberia Plus 2025
  • 2,310 Miles on Alaska Mileage Plan
  • 2,104 Miles on American AAdvantage
  • 2,104 Award Miles on Bangkok Airways FlyerBonus
  • 2,104 Points on JetBlue TrueBlue
  • 2,104 Award Miles on LATAM Pass
  • 2,104 Points + 14 Elite Points on Malaysia Airlines Enrich
  • 2,104 Miles on MEA Cedar Miles
  • 2,104 Miles on Royal Air Maroc Safar Flyer
  • 2,104 Miles on Royal Jordanian Royal Club
  • 2,104 Miles on SriLankan FlySmiLes
  • 2,104 Award Miles on Oman Air Sindbad
  • 2,104 Avios + 336 Tier Points on The British Airways Club
  • Customize Calculation
Data provided by miles.travel-dealz.com. Without guarantee on correctness.
Information & Tips for India

India is a large and diverse country with major tourist sights like the Taj Mahal in Agra, the forts and palaces of Rajasthan, the backwaters of Kerala, and spiritual cities like Varanasi and Rishikesh. The currency used is the Indian Rupee (INR). Prices vary widely—budget travel is possible, but mid-range and luxury options are also common, especially in tourist-heavy areas. Weather depends heavily on region and season: winters (Nov–Feb) are generally pleasant, while summers (Mar–June) can be extremely hot, and the monsoon (June–Sept) brings heavy rainfall in many parts.

India’s transport infrastructure is a mix of modern and outdated systems. Within cities, getting around can be chaotic but manageable—options include auto-rickshaws, taxis, metro systems in larger cities like Delhi and Mumbai, and app-based services like Uber and Ola. Between cities, India has an extensive railway network that’s affordable but often crowded and prone to delays; domestic flights are common and relatively inexpensive for longer distances. Roads connect most places, but traffic and conditions can be unpredictable.

We’ve compared various eSIM providers, such as eSIM4Travel and SimOptions. To see which plan is best for your travel needs and which network offers the best coverage, feel free to read our detailed guide:

The Best eSIM Plans for India 🇮🇳 Compared

→ All Dealz for India

Cover Picture: © Kriangkrai

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Comment (1)

  1. Karl says:

    Beware of seat reservations and upgrades when booking with multiple travelers, even for Privilege Club Platinum status; Qatar Airways is being inconsistent and uncooperative:
    Here’s what happened to me: I booked a trip to Southern Africa, economy, for 3 people. As a Privilege Club Platinum member, I was able to reserve seats for all 3 travellers free of charge, which I was very pleased about. Since I was able to redeem my QCredits for a business upgrade, I was able to do that successfully for one leg of the trip. The nasty surprise: the booking is then split, meaning my companion travellers received their own booking number. I was made aware of this in the course of the upgrade request and as a precaution I called Qatar Airways twice to ask what would happen to the seat reservations of my 2 companion travellers. I was assured that the existing seat reservations remain in place. Only in the case of a desired change, these would be subject to a fee because I am no longer in the same booking as a Privilege Club Platinum member. So far so good. Therefore, I did the upgrade, we got 2 different bookings, the seat reservations remained.
    Then the bad surprise a few weeks later: for the flight VIE-DOH the flight schedule was changed by 1.5 hours and the aircraft was changed from A350 to B787. It came as it had to come: the seat reservations of the companion passengers were GONE. But not all, but only from those 3 flights that remained UNCHANGED. On the flight VIE-DOH the seats remained reserved.
    A subsequent call to the Qatar hotline brought nothing: the system does not provide for free seat reservations; any restoration of the original seat reservations would be subject to a charge (approx. Euro 200!). A complaint on the Qatar website has also been unsuccessful so far. The argument: after the split of the two reservations, the system automatically deletes the seat reservations for the fellow passengers, since they would have no status and therefore no free seats. But this is total non-sense, because firstly, the seat reservations remained after the split, only when the 1st flight was changed, it came to the deletion and secondly exactly the changed flight was not affected by the cancellation of the seats, but only the 3 unchanged flights.
    What remains: despite assurance of the airline that already booked seats remain, these were deleted. The airline refuses with inconclusive arguments to restore the reservations. I find this procedure extremely unfriendly to the customers. If Qatar Airways does not finally agree, I must advise every Privilege Club status holder not to make a similar booking with several passengers and then upgrade only for themselves, because the other passengers lose any advantages of the joint booking.

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