Domestic-to-international connection at Orlando (MCO) The Next CEO of Stack OverflowRe-checking luggage at connecting airportsHow can I find the arrival gate for a flight?Luggage in multi-connection intercontinental air travelIndia domestic flights to carry same baggage as international flightsWay to avoid two bookings for a flight?Transit at Istanbul Ataturk AirportIs 1 hour 45 min enough time to get through Dulles customs and immigration to make connecting flight?After arriving at JFK on an international flight, what happens with my through-checked baggage?LAX connection new check in and securityIs a 1hr 3min layover at ORD (Chicago) enough when coming in international?

Multi tool use
Why is my new battery behaving weirdly?
I want to delete every two lines after 3rd lines in file contain very large number of lines :
Why does standard notation not preserve intervals (visually)
Is micro rebar a better way to reinforce concrete than rebar?
WOW air has ceased operation, can I get my tickets refunded?
Which one is the true statement?
Is it ever safe to open a suspicious HTML file (e.g. email attachment)?
Method for adding error messages to a dictionary given a key
How to count occurrences of text in a file?
Reference request: Grassmannian and Plucker coordinates in type B, C, D
Can you be charged for obstruction for refusing to answer questions?
If Nick Fury and Coulson already knew about aliens (Kree and Skrull) why did they wait until Thor's appearance to start making weapons?
Does soap repel water?
How to avoid supervisors with prejudiced views?
What was the first Unix version to run on a microcomputer?
Running a General Election and the European Elections together
What did we know about the Kessel run before the prequels?
What happened in Rome, when the western empire "fell"?
Do I need to write [sic] when a number is less than 10 but isn't written out?
Why the difference in type-inference over the as-pattern in two similar function definitions?
Why is the US ranked as #45 in Press Freedom ratings, despite its extremely permissive free speech laws?
INSERT to a table from a database to other (same SQL Server) using Dynamic SQL
Find non-case sensitive string in a mixed list of elements?
Axiom Schema vs Axiom
Domestic-to-international connection at Orlando (MCO)
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowRe-checking luggage at connecting airportsHow can I find the arrival gate for a flight?Luggage in multi-connection intercontinental air travelIndia domestic flights to carry same baggage as international flightsWay to avoid two bookings for a flight?Transit at Istanbul Ataturk AirportIs 1 hour 45 min enough time to get through Dulles customs and immigration to make connecting flight?After arriving at JFK on an international flight, what happens with my through-checked baggage?LAX connection new check in and securityIs a 1hr 3min layover at ORD (Chicago) enough when coming in international?
We will fly from Charlotte (CLT) to Orlando (MCO) on American Airlines. From there we will take Copa airlines to Panama. I appreciate any advice: Is 2 hours enough to move from the arrival gate to the departure one, considering that they are two separate booked flights and I will have to check my luggage and go through check point?
airports connecting-flights orlando
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
We will fly from Charlotte (CLT) to Orlando (MCO) on American Airlines. From there we will take Copa airlines to Panama. I appreciate any advice: Is 2 hours enough to move from the arrival gate to the departure one, considering that they are two separate booked flights and I will have to check my luggage and go through check point?
airports connecting-flights orlando
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
We will fly from Charlotte (CLT) to Orlando (MCO) on American Airlines. From there we will take Copa airlines to Panama. I appreciate any advice: Is 2 hours enough to move from the arrival gate to the departure one, considering that they are two separate booked flights and I will have to check my luggage and go through check point?
airports connecting-flights orlando
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
We will fly from Charlotte (CLT) to Orlando (MCO) on American Airlines. From there we will take Copa airlines to Panama. I appreciate any advice: Is 2 hours enough to move from the arrival gate to the departure one, considering that they are two separate booked flights and I will have to check my luggage and go through check point?
airports connecting-flights orlando
airports connecting-flights orlando
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited 8 hours ago


David Richerby
14.3k94589
14.3k94589
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked 8 hours ago
VirginiaVirginia
191
191
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Virginia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
This is a pretty bad idea, especially with checked bags. When you book flights separately like this, you're arranging your own connection. If you miss that flight to Panama, the next one with available space may not be for at least a day (Copa does operate a couple of flights a day from MCO, so figuring out whether you're on the first one or the last one would be helpful), and you may have to pay significant change fees.
Copa's check-in counters close 60 minutes before departure time, and they recommend that you arrive three hours before departure for flights departing the US. Even if your first flight is on time, it could easily take the better part of an hour before you get off the plane, walk through the satellite terminal, ride the train, wait for your bags, exit the secure area, walk to the departure area, find the Copa counter, and check-in. If your first flight is even slightly delayed, or even if the luggage takes an excessive amount of time to arrive, you could miss the check-in deadline.
Unless you're very familiar with dealing with separate bookings, I'd highly recommend you purchase a single ticket for this trip (which will likely involve different airlines and routing), so that you do not need to recheck your bags and benefit from the airline's protections if you misconnect. If you must travel on two separate bookings, I'd leave much more time in between the flights and be prepared to deal with the effects of any delays.
add a comment |
I wouldn't be comfortable with a two-ticket connection that short.
If everything goes to plan, things should be fine. However, all it takes is for your incoming plane to be half an hour late, and baggage reclaim to be slow, and you're butting up against the usual requirement to check in at least an hour before the departure of an international flight. And then if getting back through security is low, you can probably politely push to the front of the line, and probably make your flight but all of this is stressful and not a good start to your trip.
If you don't make it to check-in on time, Copa will probably try to rebook you but they're under no obligation to do so: it's your responsibility to get to the departure airport on time and, as far as Copa are concerned, Orlando is your departure airport. It's not their problem that you got there by plane rather than by car from downtown.
If you must buy two separate tickets, I would suggest allowing at least three or four hours transit time in Orlando. However, I just searched and found that American will fly you Charlotte–Miami–Panama City on random dates in the middle of April for about $750. The key advantage of being on one ticket is that the airline will automatically rebook you if you miss a connection due to a delayed flight, and your luggage will be checked through to your final destination.
1
If OP didn't have bags, could they just stay in the sterile area?
– Harper
4 hours ago
@Harper Not if they need to check in for their next flight, right?
– David Richerby
4 hours ago
I haven't flown international in an age, I just assumed all check-in these days was replaced by printing your boarding pass at home. Boca does seem to have that (unless you're unlucky)... With web check-in, when do they challenge you for your proof of right to enter the destination country?
– Harper
3 hours ago
1
@Harper, I don't think this would work. MCO has two different sides, each with separate security access. AA is on side B, Copa is on side A. So can't stay in one place. orlandoairports.net/getting-around-mco/#terminal-maps
– BowlOfRed
3 hours ago
@Harper I always have bags to check when I'm flying internationally so they check then. Not sure what would happen if I was travelling without checked bags.
– David Richerby
3 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Eep. Since the flights aren't on the same ticket, making the connection is all on you. In that case, I wouldn't shave it that close on a domestic flight inside the same terminal, and not checking bags (so I get to stay in the sterile area). And I'm solo and agile.
In this case, you are
- starting with any delays from the first flight (and American owes you nothing if they're late)
- cat-herding a family
- somebody needs bathroom
- waiting for baggage
- lugging bags around
changing terminals (finding transit, etc.)- getting to the front in a check-in line, which can be enormous
You have 1 hour to do all of the above, since Copa has a 1-hour-before-flight cutoff for check-in.
Even if you accomplish the check-in online, which they may randomly not allow, you still have to also (in 30 more minutes)
- queue and clear TSA inspection
- find your gate and get to it
- present your documents to prove you have permission to enter Panama
It would be a crowning moment of awesome if you pulled it off. Far more likely, this malfunctions, and it's all on you. Copa owes you nothing, you are at their mercy and I gather you chose this circus because it's cheap, this is why it's cheap so don't expect a bailout. You could have to pay to rebook, then get a motel for the night with transportation there also.
My advice would be change the domestic booking so it's earlier. Schedule 5 hours earlier so you have slack time for all of the above.
Also, fire your travel agent :)
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Virginia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f134834%2fdomestic-to-international-connection-at-orlando-mco%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is a pretty bad idea, especially with checked bags. When you book flights separately like this, you're arranging your own connection. If you miss that flight to Panama, the next one with available space may not be for at least a day (Copa does operate a couple of flights a day from MCO, so figuring out whether you're on the first one or the last one would be helpful), and you may have to pay significant change fees.
Copa's check-in counters close 60 minutes before departure time, and they recommend that you arrive three hours before departure for flights departing the US. Even if your first flight is on time, it could easily take the better part of an hour before you get off the plane, walk through the satellite terminal, ride the train, wait for your bags, exit the secure area, walk to the departure area, find the Copa counter, and check-in. If your first flight is even slightly delayed, or even if the luggage takes an excessive amount of time to arrive, you could miss the check-in deadline.
Unless you're very familiar with dealing with separate bookings, I'd highly recommend you purchase a single ticket for this trip (which will likely involve different airlines and routing), so that you do not need to recheck your bags and benefit from the airline's protections if you misconnect. If you must travel on two separate bookings, I'd leave much more time in between the flights and be prepared to deal with the effects of any delays.
add a comment |
This is a pretty bad idea, especially with checked bags. When you book flights separately like this, you're arranging your own connection. If you miss that flight to Panama, the next one with available space may not be for at least a day (Copa does operate a couple of flights a day from MCO, so figuring out whether you're on the first one or the last one would be helpful), and you may have to pay significant change fees.
Copa's check-in counters close 60 minutes before departure time, and they recommend that you arrive three hours before departure for flights departing the US. Even if your first flight is on time, it could easily take the better part of an hour before you get off the plane, walk through the satellite terminal, ride the train, wait for your bags, exit the secure area, walk to the departure area, find the Copa counter, and check-in. If your first flight is even slightly delayed, or even if the luggage takes an excessive amount of time to arrive, you could miss the check-in deadline.
Unless you're very familiar with dealing with separate bookings, I'd highly recommend you purchase a single ticket for this trip (which will likely involve different airlines and routing), so that you do not need to recheck your bags and benefit from the airline's protections if you misconnect. If you must travel on two separate bookings, I'd leave much more time in between the flights and be prepared to deal with the effects of any delays.
add a comment |
This is a pretty bad idea, especially with checked bags. When you book flights separately like this, you're arranging your own connection. If you miss that flight to Panama, the next one with available space may not be for at least a day (Copa does operate a couple of flights a day from MCO, so figuring out whether you're on the first one or the last one would be helpful), and you may have to pay significant change fees.
Copa's check-in counters close 60 minutes before departure time, and they recommend that you arrive three hours before departure for flights departing the US. Even if your first flight is on time, it could easily take the better part of an hour before you get off the plane, walk through the satellite terminal, ride the train, wait for your bags, exit the secure area, walk to the departure area, find the Copa counter, and check-in. If your first flight is even slightly delayed, or even if the luggage takes an excessive amount of time to arrive, you could miss the check-in deadline.
Unless you're very familiar with dealing with separate bookings, I'd highly recommend you purchase a single ticket for this trip (which will likely involve different airlines and routing), so that you do not need to recheck your bags and benefit from the airline's protections if you misconnect. If you must travel on two separate bookings, I'd leave much more time in between the flights and be prepared to deal with the effects of any delays.
This is a pretty bad idea, especially with checked bags. When you book flights separately like this, you're arranging your own connection. If you miss that flight to Panama, the next one with available space may not be for at least a day (Copa does operate a couple of flights a day from MCO, so figuring out whether you're on the first one or the last one would be helpful), and you may have to pay significant change fees.
Copa's check-in counters close 60 minutes before departure time, and they recommend that you arrive three hours before departure for flights departing the US. Even if your first flight is on time, it could easily take the better part of an hour before you get off the plane, walk through the satellite terminal, ride the train, wait for your bags, exit the secure area, walk to the departure area, find the Copa counter, and check-in. If your first flight is even slightly delayed, or even if the luggage takes an excessive amount of time to arrive, you could miss the check-in deadline.
Unless you're very familiar with dealing with separate bookings, I'd highly recommend you purchase a single ticket for this trip (which will likely involve different airlines and routing), so that you do not need to recheck your bags and benefit from the airline's protections if you misconnect. If you must travel on two separate bookings, I'd leave much more time in between the flights and be prepared to deal with the effects of any delays.
answered 8 hours ago
Zach LiptonZach Lipton
61.8k11188248
61.8k11188248
add a comment |
add a comment |
I wouldn't be comfortable with a two-ticket connection that short.
If everything goes to plan, things should be fine. However, all it takes is for your incoming plane to be half an hour late, and baggage reclaim to be slow, and you're butting up against the usual requirement to check in at least an hour before the departure of an international flight. And then if getting back through security is low, you can probably politely push to the front of the line, and probably make your flight but all of this is stressful and not a good start to your trip.
If you don't make it to check-in on time, Copa will probably try to rebook you but they're under no obligation to do so: it's your responsibility to get to the departure airport on time and, as far as Copa are concerned, Orlando is your departure airport. It's not their problem that you got there by plane rather than by car from downtown.
If you must buy two separate tickets, I would suggest allowing at least three or four hours transit time in Orlando. However, I just searched and found that American will fly you Charlotte–Miami–Panama City on random dates in the middle of April for about $750. The key advantage of being on one ticket is that the airline will automatically rebook you if you miss a connection due to a delayed flight, and your luggage will be checked through to your final destination.
1
If OP didn't have bags, could they just stay in the sterile area?
– Harper
4 hours ago
@Harper Not if they need to check in for their next flight, right?
– David Richerby
4 hours ago
I haven't flown international in an age, I just assumed all check-in these days was replaced by printing your boarding pass at home. Boca does seem to have that (unless you're unlucky)... With web check-in, when do they challenge you for your proof of right to enter the destination country?
– Harper
3 hours ago
1
@Harper, I don't think this would work. MCO has two different sides, each with separate security access. AA is on side B, Copa is on side A. So can't stay in one place. orlandoairports.net/getting-around-mco/#terminal-maps
– BowlOfRed
3 hours ago
@Harper I always have bags to check when I'm flying internationally so they check then. Not sure what would happen if I was travelling without checked bags.
– David Richerby
3 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
I wouldn't be comfortable with a two-ticket connection that short.
If everything goes to plan, things should be fine. However, all it takes is for your incoming plane to be half an hour late, and baggage reclaim to be slow, and you're butting up against the usual requirement to check in at least an hour before the departure of an international flight. And then if getting back through security is low, you can probably politely push to the front of the line, and probably make your flight but all of this is stressful and not a good start to your trip.
If you don't make it to check-in on time, Copa will probably try to rebook you but they're under no obligation to do so: it's your responsibility to get to the departure airport on time and, as far as Copa are concerned, Orlando is your departure airport. It's not their problem that you got there by plane rather than by car from downtown.
If you must buy two separate tickets, I would suggest allowing at least three or four hours transit time in Orlando. However, I just searched and found that American will fly you Charlotte–Miami–Panama City on random dates in the middle of April for about $750. The key advantage of being on one ticket is that the airline will automatically rebook you if you miss a connection due to a delayed flight, and your luggage will be checked through to your final destination.
1
If OP didn't have bags, could they just stay in the sterile area?
– Harper
4 hours ago
@Harper Not if they need to check in for their next flight, right?
– David Richerby
4 hours ago
I haven't flown international in an age, I just assumed all check-in these days was replaced by printing your boarding pass at home. Boca does seem to have that (unless you're unlucky)... With web check-in, when do they challenge you for your proof of right to enter the destination country?
– Harper
3 hours ago
1
@Harper, I don't think this would work. MCO has two different sides, each with separate security access. AA is on side B, Copa is on side A. So can't stay in one place. orlandoairports.net/getting-around-mco/#terminal-maps
– BowlOfRed
3 hours ago
@Harper I always have bags to check when I'm flying internationally so they check then. Not sure what would happen if I was travelling without checked bags.
– David Richerby
3 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
I wouldn't be comfortable with a two-ticket connection that short.
If everything goes to plan, things should be fine. However, all it takes is for your incoming plane to be half an hour late, and baggage reclaim to be slow, and you're butting up against the usual requirement to check in at least an hour before the departure of an international flight. And then if getting back through security is low, you can probably politely push to the front of the line, and probably make your flight but all of this is stressful and not a good start to your trip.
If you don't make it to check-in on time, Copa will probably try to rebook you but they're under no obligation to do so: it's your responsibility to get to the departure airport on time and, as far as Copa are concerned, Orlando is your departure airport. It's not their problem that you got there by plane rather than by car from downtown.
If you must buy two separate tickets, I would suggest allowing at least three or four hours transit time in Orlando. However, I just searched and found that American will fly you Charlotte–Miami–Panama City on random dates in the middle of April for about $750. The key advantage of being on one ticket is that the airline will automatically rebook you if you miss a connection due to a delayed flight, and your luggage will be checked through to your final destination.
I wouldn't be comfortable with a two-ticket connection that short.
If everything goes to plan, things should be fine. However, all it takes is for your incoming plane to be half an hour late, and baggage reclaim to be slow, and you're butting up against the usual requirement to check in at least an hour before the departure of an international flight. And then if getting back through security is low, you can probably politely push to the front of the line, and probably make your flight but all of this is stressful and not a good start to your trip.
If you don't make it to check-in on time, Copa will probably try to rebook you but they're under no obligation to do so: it's your responsibility to get to the departure airport on time and, as far as Copa are concerned, Orlando is your departure airport. It's not their problem that you got there by plane rather than by car from downtown.
If you must buy two separate tickets, I would suggest allowing at least three or four hours transit time in Orlando. However, I just searched and found that American will fly you Charlotte–Miami–Panama City on random dates in the middle of April for about $750. The key advantage of being on one ticket is that the airline will automatically rebook you if you miss a connection due to a delayed flight, and your luggage will be checked through to your final destination.
answered 8 hours ago


David RicherbyDavid Richerby
14.3k94589
14.3k94589
1
If OP didn't have bags, could they just stay in the sterile area?
– Harper
4 hours ago
@Harper Not if they need to check in for their next flight, right?
– David Richerby
4 hours ago
I haven't flown international in an age, I just assumed all check-in these days was replaced by printing your boarding pass at home. Boca does seem to have that (unless you're unlucky)... With web check-in, when do they challenge you for your proof of right to enter the destination country?
– Harper
3 hours ago
1
@Harper, I don't think this would work. MCO has two different sides, each with separate security access. AA is on side B, Copa is on side A. So can't stay in one place. orlandoairports.net/getting-around-mco/#terminal-maps
– BowlOfRed
3 hours ago
@Harper I always have bags to check when I'm flying internationally so they check then. Not sure what would happen if I was travelling without checked bags.
– David Richerby
3 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
1
If OP didn't have bags, could they just stay in the sterile area?
– Harper
4 hours ago
@Harper Not if they need to check in for their next flight, right?
– David Richerby
4 hours ago
I haven't flown international in an age, I just assumed all check-in these days was replaced by printing your boarding pass at home. Boca does seem to have that (unless you're unlucky)... With web check-in, when do they challenge you for your proof of right to enter the destination country?
– Harper
3 hours ago
1
@Harper, I don't think this would work. MCO has two different sides, each with separate security access. AA is on side B, Copa is on side A. So can't stay in one place. orlandoairports.net/getting-around-mco/#terminal-maps
– BowlOfRed
3 hours ago
@Harper I always have bags to check when I'm flying internationally so they check then. Not sure what would happen if I was travelling without checked bags.
– David Richerby
3 hours ago
1
1
If OP didn't have bags, could they just stay in the sterile area?
– Harper
4 hours ago
If OP didn't have bags, could they just stay in the sterile area?
– Harper
4 hours ago
@Harper Not if they need to check in for their next flight, right?
– David Richerby
4 hours ago
@Harper Not if they need to check in for their next flight, right?
– David Richerby
4 hours ago
I haven't flown international in an age, I just assumed all check-in these days was replaced by printing your boarding pass at home. Boca does seem to have that (unless you're unlucky)... With web check-in, when do they challenge you for your proof of right to enter the destination country?
– Harper
3 hours ago
I haven't flown international in an age, I just assumed all check-in these days was replaced by printing your boarding pass at home. Boca does seem to have that (unless you're unlucky)... With web check-in, when do they challenge you for your proof of right to enter the destination country?
– Harper
3 hours ago
1
1
@Harper, I don't think this would work. MCO has two different sides, each with separate security access. AA is on side B, Copa is on side A. So can't stay in one place. orlandoairports.net/getting-around-mco/#terminal-maps
– BowlOfRed
3 hours ago
@Harper, I don't think this would work. MCO has two different sides, each with separate security access. AA is on side B, Copa is on side A. So can't stay in one place. orlandoairports.net/getting-around-mco/#terminal-maps
– BowlOfRed
3 hours ago
@Harper I always have bags to check when I'm flying internationally so they check then. Not sure what would happen if I was travelling without checked bags.
– David Richerby
3 hours ago
@Harper I always have bags to check when I'm flying internationally so they check then. Not sure what would happen if I was travelling without checked bags.
– David Richerby
3 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Eep. Since the flights aren't on the same ticket, making the connection is all on you. In that case, I wouldn't shave it that close on a domestic flight inside the same terminal, and not checking bags (so I get to stay in the sterile area). And I'm solo and agile.
In this case, you are
- starting with any delays from the first flight (and American owes you nothing if they're late)
- cat-herding a family
- somebody needs bathroom
- waiting for baggage
- lugging bags around
changing terminals (finding transit, etc.)- getting to the front in a check-in line, which can be enormous
You have 1 hour to do all of the above, since Copa has a 1-hour-before-flight cutoff for check-in.
Even if you accomplish the check-in online, which they may randomly not allow, you still have to also (in 30 more minutes)
- queue and clear TSA inspection
- find your gate and get to it
- present your documents to prove you have permission to enter Panama
It would be a crowning moment of awesome if you pulled it off. Far more likely, this malfunctions, and it's all on you. Copa owes you nothing, you are at their mercy and I gather you chose this circus because it's cheap, this is why it's cheap so don't expect a bailout. You could have to pay to rebook, then get a motel for the night with transportation there also.
My advice would be change the domestic booking so it's earlier. Schedule 5 hours earlier so you have slack time for all of the above.
Also, fire your travel agent :)
add a comment |
Eep. Since the flights aren't on the same ticket, making the connection is all on you. In that case, I wouldn't shave it that close on a domestic flight inside the same terminal, and not checking bags (so I get to stay in the sterile area). And I'm solo and agile.
In this case, you are
- starting with any delays from the first flight (and American owes you nothing if they're late)
- cat-herding a family
- somebody needs bathroom
- waiting for baggage
- lugging bags around
changing terminals (finding transit, etc.)- getting to the front in a check-in line, which can be enormous
You have 1 hour to do all of the above, since Copa has a 1-hour-before-flight cutoff for check-in.
Even if you accomplish the check-in online, which they may randomly not allow, you still have to also (in 30 more minutes)
- queue and clear TSA inspection
- find your gate and get to it
- present your documents to prove you have permission to enter Panama
It would be a crowning moment of awesome if you pulled it off. Far more likely, this malfunctions, and it's all on you. Copa owes you nothing, you are at their mercy and I gather you chose this circus because it's cheap, this is why it's cheap so don't expect a bailout. You could have to pay to rebook, then get a motel for the night with transportation there also.
My advice would be change the domestic booking so it's earlier. Schedule 5 hours earlier so you have slack time for all of the above.
Also, fire your travel agent :)
add a comment |
Eep. Since the flights aren't on the same ticket, making the connection is all on you. In that case, I wouldn't shave it that close on a domestic flight inside the same terminal, and not checking bags (so I get to stay in the sterile area). And I'm solo and agile.
In this case, you are
- starting with any delays from the first flight (and American owes you nothing if they're late)
- cat-herding a family
- somebody needs bathroom
- waiting for baggage
- lugging bags around
changing terminals (finding transit, etc.)- getting to the front in a check-in line, which can be enormous
You have 1 hour to do all of the above, since Copa has a 1-hour-before-flight cutoff for check-in.
Even if you accomplish the check-in online, which they may randomly not allow, you still have to also (in 30 more minutes)
- queue and clear TSA inspection
- find your gate and get to it
- present your documents to prove you have permission to enter Panama
It would be a crowning moment of awesome if you pulled it off. Far more likely, this malfunctions, and it's all on you. Copa owes you nothing, you are at their mercy and I gather you chose this circus because it's cheap, this is why it's cheap so don't expect a bailout. You could have to pay to rebook, then get a motel for the night with transportation there also.
My advice would be change the domestic booking so it's earlier. Schedule 5 hours earlier so you have slack time for all of the above.
Also, fire your travel agent :)
Eep. Since the flights aren't on the same ticket, making the connection is all on you. In that case, I wouldn't shave it that close on a domestic flight inside the same terminal, and not checking bags (so I get to stay in the sterile area). And I'm solo and agile.
In this case, you are
- starting with any delays from the first flight (and American owes you nothing if they're late)
- cat-herding a family
- somebody needs bathroom
- waiting for baggage
- lugging bags around
changing terminals (finding transit, etc.)- getting to the front in a check-in line, which can be enormous
You have 1 hour to do all of the above, since Copa has a 1-hour-before-flight cutoff for check-in.
Even if you accomplish the check-in online, which they may randomly not allow, you still have to also (in 30 more minutes)
- queue and clear TSA inspection
- find your gate and get to it
- present your documents to prove you have permission to enter Panama
It would be a crowning moment of awesome if you pulled it off. Far more likely, this malfunctions, and it's all on you. Copa owes you nothing, you are at their mercy and I gather you chose this circus because it's cheap, this is why it's cheap so don't expect a bailout. You could have to pay to rebook, then get a motel for the night with transportation there also.
My advice would be change the domestic booking so it's earlier. Schedule 5 hours earlier so you have slack time for all of the above.
Also, fire your travel agent :)
answered 3 hours ago
HarperHarper
12.5k32261
12.5k32261
add a comment |
add a comment |
Virginia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Virginia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Virginia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Virginia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f134834%2fdomestic-to-international-connection-at-orlando-mco%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
hFh9,RsMQZvbZGJObs1OwSIjoRSDZpjkxmZrq,o0GvJ6ulPF9qrbdMVB