US to Europe trip with Montreal layover - is 52 minutes enough?Is feasible to visit Old Montreal or Downtown...

redhat 7 + How to stop systemctl service permanent

How can I discourage/prevent PCs from using door choke-points?

Need some help with my first LaTeX drawing…

Extension of Splitting Fields over An Arbitrary Field

Can infringement of a trademark be pursued for using a company's name in a sentence?

"However" used in a conditional clause?

What is the blue range indicating on this manifold pressure gauge?

Do Bugbears' arms literally get longer when it's their turn?

How do anti-virus programs start at Windows boot?

Decoding assembly instructions in a Game Boy disassembler

Provisioning profile doesn't include the application-identifier and keychain-access-groups entitlements

Counter-example to the existence of left Bousfield localization of combinatorial model category

What has been your most complicated TikZ drawing?

What happens with multiple copies of Humility and Glorious Anthem on the battlefield?

How does Dispel Magic work against Stoneskin?

Touchscreen-controlled dentist office snowman collector game

Is it illegal in Germany to take sick leave if you caused your own illness with food?

Why don't MCU characters ever seem to have language issues?

Rejected in 4th interview round citing insufficient years of experience

Potentiometer like component

Why does Deadpool say "You're welcome, Canada," after shooting Ryan Reynolds in the end credits?

What Happens when Passenger Refuses to Fly Boeing 737 Max?

Should QA ask requirements to developers?

Examples of odd-dimensional manifolds that do not admit contact structure



US to Europe trip with Montreal layover - is 52 minutes enough?


Is feasible to visit Old Montreal or Downtown during a 12-hour layover?70 minutes Layover at LAXIs 90 minutes enough time to get through customs at Buenos Aires Airport on a transit flight?Are 90 minutes layover in Munich Airport and 120 minutes in Heathrow airport enough?Is 2 hours 20 minutes enough for a layover in Frankfurt Airport?Is 75 minutes enough to transfer at Schiphol airport?Is 1h 15m layover in Brisbane long enough?is 55 minutes enough time to connect in Guadalajara from Mexico City to Sacramento,Ca?Is 55 minutes layover in Dusseldorf possible?Is a 1hr 3min layover at ORD (Chicago) enough when coming in international?













4















I'm looking at a flight that goes from the US to Europe via Montreal. Is a 52 minute layover in Montreal enough time to get to the next flight? Arrival time in Montreal would be about 8PM.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Are both flights with the same airway?

    – Pierre B
    10 hours ago











  • Use the CanBorder app to shave off a minute or two at immigration. Download before you depart and fill it out before you arrive instead of the landing card.

    – Michael Hampton
    2 hours ago













  • Yes, they are on the same airline, but it will be necessary to change planes.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago













  • Good to know about CanBorder. Had not known of it before.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago











  • The answer varies specifically by airport, airline (same/change/codeshare), terminal layout, do you have a terminal change, how long Canadian immigration will take (what is your nationality, passport, visa status and country of residence), do you have only carry-on/checked luggage, how much do you care if your checked luggage doesn't make it...?

    – smci
    2 hours ago
















4















I'm looking at a flight that goes from the US to Europe via Montreal. Is a 52 minute layover in Montreal enough time to get to the next flight? Arrival time in Montreal would be about 8PM.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Are both flights with the same airway?

    – Pierre B
    10 hours ago











  • Use the CanBorder app to shave off a minute or two at immigration. Download before you depart and fill it out before you arrive instead of the landing card.

    – Michael Hampton
    2 hours ago













  • Yes, they are on the same airline, but it will be necessary to change planes.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago













  • Good to know about CanBorder. Had not known of it before.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago











  • The answer varies specifically by airport, airline (same/change/codeshare), terminal layout, do you have a terminal change, how long Canadian immigration will take (what is your nationality, passport, visa status and country of residence), do you have only carry-on/checked luggage, how much do you care if your checked luggage doesn't make it...?

    – smci
    2 hours ago














4












4








4


1






I'm looking at a flight that goes from the US to Europe via Montreal. Is a 52 minute layover in Montreal enough time to get to the next flight? Arrival time in Montreal would be about 8PM.










share|improve this question
















I'm looking at a flight that goes from the US to Europe via Montreal. Is a 52 minute layover in Montreal enough time to get to the next flight? Arrival time in Montreal would be about 8PM.







layovers short-connections yul






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 27 mins ago









smci

1,227912




1,227912










asked 13 hours ago









JagularJagular

5701417




5701417








  • 1





    Are both flights with the same airway?

    – Pierre B
    10 hours ago











  • Use the CanBorder app to shave off a minute or two at immigration. Download before you depart and fill it out before you arrive instead of the landing card.

    – Michael Hampton
    2 hours ago













  • Yes, they are on the same airline, but it will be necessary to change planes.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago













  • Good to know about CanBorder. Had not known of it before.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago











  • The answer varies specifically by airport, airline (same/change/codeshare), terminal layout, do you have a terminal change, how long Canadian immigration will take (what is your nationality, passport, visa status and country of residence), do you have only carry-on/checked luggage, how much do you care if your checked luggage doesn't make it...?

    – smci
    2 hours ago














  • 1





    Are both flights with the same airway?

    – Pierre B
    10 hours ago











  • Use the CanBorder app to shave off a minute or two at immigration. Download before you depart and fill it out before you arrive instead of the landing card.

    – Michael Hampton
    2 hours ago













  • Yes, they are on the same airline, but it will be necessary to change planes.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago













  • Good to know about CanBorder. Had not known of it before.

    – Jagular
    2 hours ago











  • The answer varies specifically by airport, airline (same/change/codeshare), terminal layout, do you have a terminal change, how long Canadian immigration will take (what is your nationality, passport, visa status and country of residence), do you have only carry-on/checked luggage, how much do you care if your checked luggage doesn't make it...?

    – smci
    2 hours ago








1




1





Are both flights with the same airway?

– Pierre B
10 hours ago





Are both flights with the same airway?

– Pierre B
10 hours ago













Use the CanBorder app to shave off a minute or two at immigration. Download before you depart and fill it out before you arrive instead of the landing card.

– Michael Hampton
2 hours ago







Use the CanBorder app to shave off a minute or two at immigration. Download before you depart and fill it out before you arrive instead of the landing card.

– Michael Hampton
2 hours ago















Yes, they are on the same airline, but it will be necessary to change planes.

– Jagular
2 hours ago







Yes, they are on the same airline, but it will be necessary to change planes.

– Jagular
2 hours ago















Good to know about CanBorder. Had not known of it before.

– Jagular
2 hours ago





Good to know about CanBorder. Had not known of it before.

– Jagular
2 hours ago













The answer varies specifically by airport, airline (same/change/codeshare), terminal layout, do you have a terminal change, how long Canadian immigration will take (what is your nationality, passport, visa status and country of residence), do you have only carry-on/checked luggage, how much do you care if your checked luggage doesn't make it...?

– smci
2 hours ago





The answer varies specifically by airport, airline (same/change/codeshare), terminal layout, do you have a terminal change, how long Canadian immigration will take (what is your nationality, passport, visa status and country of residence), do you have only carry-on/checked luggage, how much do you care if your checked luggage doesn't make it...?

– smci
2 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















9














Montreal airport has a page you might find useful:




United States-International



After having gone through border control – primary inspection, you will be asked to follow one of two procedures:




  • If your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will be directed to the international departures area.


  • If your airline does not offer the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will have to pick it up yourself from the carousel, then follow the normal procedure for international arrivals and then for international departures.





For USA->International connections, you need to find out if your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage.



If that is the case, you don't have to "clear customs" in a traditional sense at all (in Canada) and you have to simply walk over to the international departure gate. You shouldn't have a problem, unless your flight is delayed. You still have to go through "border control" (speak to a Canadian border agency worker, provide evidence of transit visa or lack of need for one, attest you aren't carrying certain goods, etc).



If it isn't the case, then you will have to get your luggage, clear Canadian customs, and only then proceed to the departure gate. This will be much trickier to pull off.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




























    8














    Possibly, if you didn't have to re-check your luggage. Canadian immigration is pretty speedy. But it's a tight connection, and a small amount of bad luck could easily lead to a missed flight, and then you'd be stuck in Montreal overnight (a pleasant place to be stuck, but still). I would never ever try it unless it was a single-ticket, guaranteed connection. (And I also wouldn't do it unless I could easily afford the extra costs for overnight accommodation and whatever messes it would make for my destination plans.)






    share|improve this answer


























    • I'm always dubious when offered a connected time that's less than an hour. There appear to be earlier flights to Montreal, so gambling on the short connection probably isn't necessary.

      – Jagular
      12 hours ago











    • In addition, I would check if there are similar flights few hours later. In this case the risk is just that you will be put in later flight. But on intercontinental flights, the probability that next flight (with a partner airline) is next day is high.

      – Giacomo Catenazzi
      11 hours ago











    • Not necessarily overnight, I should think. For example, if the scheduled flight is tonight's 9:00 Air Canada departure to London Heathrow, they could re-route the delayed traveler through Toronto in time for the flight that leaves at five minutes after midnight. (@GiacomoCatenazzi)

      – phoog
      11 hours ago






    • 1





      When this happened to me, Air Canada picked up the hotel room.

      – Andrew Lazarus
      10 hours ago






    • 1





      @Sneftel It was, in fact, bad weather which disqualified the intended crew, and I don't believe they were obligated. But international travelers could, I suppose, always think to transfer somewhere else and avoid AC entirely, so they did it.

      – Andrew Lazarus
      10 hours ago



















    5














    Air Canada note that 40 minutes is the minimum time, although they note this only applies for Air Canada/Jazz flights. I'd personally want to allow more time though






    share|improve this answer























      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
      });


      }
      });














      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function () {
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f133791%2fus-to-europe-trip-with-montreal-layover-is-52-minutes-enough%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









      9














      Montreal airport has a page you might find useful:




      United States-International



      After having gone through border control – primary inspection, you will be asked to follow one of two procedures:




      • If your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will be directed to the international departures area.


      • If your airline does not offer the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will have to pick it up yourself from the carousel, then follow the normal procedure for international arrivals and then for international departures.





      For USA->International connections, you need to find out if your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage.



      If that is the case, you don't have to "clear customs" in a traditional sense at all (in Canada) and you have to simply walk over to the international departure gate. You shouldn't have a problem, unless your flight is delayed. You still have to go through "border control" (speak to a Canadian border agency worker, provide evidence of transit visa or lack of need for one, attest you aren't carrying certain goods, etc).



      If it isn't the case, then you will have to get your luggage, clear Canadian customs, and only then proceed to the departure gate. This will be much trickier to pull off.






      share|improve this answer










      New contributor




      Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.

























        9














        Montreal airport has a page you might find useful:




        United States-International



        After having gone through border control – primary inspection, you will be asked to follow one of two procedures:




        • If your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will be directed to the international departures area.


        • If your airline does not offer the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will have to pick it up yourself from the carousel, then follow the normal procedure for international arrivals and then for international departures.





        For USA->International connections, you need to find out if your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage.



        If that is the case, you don't have to "clear customs" in a traditional sense at all (in Canada) and you have to simply walk over to the international departure gate. You shouldn't have a problem, unless your flight is delayed. You still have to go through "border control" (speak to a Canadian border agency worker, provide evidence of transit visa or lack of need for one, attest you aren't carrying certain goods, etc).



        If it isn't the case, then you will have to get your luggage, clear Canadian customs, and only then proceed to the departure gate. This will be much trickier to pull off.






        share|improve this answer










        New contributor




        Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.























          9












          9








          9







          Montreal airport has a page you might find useful:




          United States-International



          After having gone through border control – primary inspection, you will be asked to follow one of two procedures:




          • If your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will be directed to the international departures area.


          • If your airline does not offer the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will have to pick it up yourself from the carousel, then follow the normal procedure for international arrivals and then for international departures.





          For USA->International connections, you need to find out if your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage.



          If that is the case, you don't have to "clear customs" in a traditional sense at all (in Canada) and you have to simply walk over to the international departure gate. You shouldn't have a problem, unless your flight is delayed. You still have to go through "border control" (speak to a Canadian border agency worker, provide evidence of transit visa or lack of need for one, attest you aren't carrying certain goods, etc).



          If it isn't the case, then you will have to get your luggage, clear Canadian customs, and only then proceed to the departure gate. This will be much trickier to pull off.






          share|improve this answer










          New contributor




          Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.










          Montreal airport has a page you might find useful:




          United States-International



          After having gone through border control – primary inspection, you will be asked to follow one of two procedures:




          • If your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will be directed to the international departures area.


          • If your airline does not offer the option of automatically transferring your luggage, you will have to pick it up yourself from the carousel, then follow the normal procedure for international arrivals and then for international departures.





          For USA->International connections, you need to find out if your airline offers the option of automatically transferring your luggage.



          If that is the case, you don't have to "clear customs" in a traditional sense at all (in Canada) and you have to simply walk over to the international departure gate. You shouldn't have a problem, unless your flight is delayed. You still have to go through "border control" (speak to a Canadian border agency worker, provide evidence of transit visa or lack of need for one, attest you aren't carrying certain goods, etc).



          If it isn't the case, then you will have to get your luggage, clear Canadian customs, and only then proceed to the departure gate. This will be much trickier to pull off.







          share|improve this answer










          New contributor




          Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 10 hours ago





















          New contributor




          Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          answered 11 hours ago









          YakkYakk

          1936




          1936




          New contributor




          Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.





          New contributor





          Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.






          Yakk is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.

























              8














              Possibly, if you didn't have to re-check your luggage. Canadian immigration is pretty speedy. But it's a tight connection, and a small amount of bad luck could easily lead to a missed flight, and then you'd be stuck in Montreal overnight (a pleasant place to be stuck, but still). I would never ever try it unless it was a single-ticket, guaranteed connection. (And I also wouldn't do it unless I could easily afford the extra costs for overnight accommodation and whatever messes it would make for my destination plans.)






              share|improve this answer


























              • I'm always dubious when offered a connected time that's less than an hour. There appear to be earlier flights to Montreal, so gambling on the short connection probably isn't necessary.

                – Jagular
                12 hours ago











              • In addition, I would check if there are similar flights few hours later. In this case the risk is just that you will be put in later flight. But on intercontinental flights, the probability that next flight (with a partner airline) is next day is high.

                – Giacomo Catenazzi
                11 hours ago











              • Not necessarily overnight, I should think. For example, if the scheduled flight is tonight's 9:00 Air Canada departure to London Heathrow, they could re-route the delayed traveler through Toronto in time for the flight that leaves at five minutes after midnight. (@GiacomoCatenazzi)

                – phoog
                11 hours ago






              • 1





                When this happened to me, Air Canada picked up the hotel room.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago






              • 1





                @Sneftel It was, in fact, bad weather which disqualified the intended crew, and I don't believe they were obligated. But international travelers could, I suppose, always think to transfer somewhere else and avoid AC entirely, so they did it.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago
















              8














              Possibly, if you didn't have to re-check your luggage. Canadian immigration is pretty speedy. But it's a tight connection, and a small amount of bad luck could easily lead to a missed flight, and then you'd be stuck in Montreal overnight (a pleasant place to be stuck, but still). I would never ever try it unless it was a single-ticket, guaranteed connection. (And I also wouldn't do it unless I could easily afford the extra costs for overnight accommodation and whatever messes it would make for my destination plans.)






              share|improve this answer


























              • I'm always dubious when offered a connected time that's less than an hour. There appear to be earlier flights to Montreal, so gambling on the short connection probably isn't necessary.

                – Jagular
                12 hours ago











              • In addition, I would check if there are similar flights few hours later. In this case the risk is just that you will be put in later flight. But on intercontinental flights, the probability that next flight (with a partner airline) is next day is high.

                – Giacomo Catenazzi
                11 hours ago











              • Not necessarily overnight, I should think. For example, if the scheduled flight is tonight's 9:00 Air Canada departure to London Heathrow, they could re-route the delayed traveler through Toronto in time for the flight that leaves at five minutes after midnight. (@GiacomoCatenazzi)

                – phoog
                11 hours ago






              • 1





                When this happened to me, Air Canada picked up the hotel room.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago






              • 1





                @Sneftel It was, in fact, bad weather which disqualified the intended crew, and I don't believe they were obligated. But international travelers could, I suppose, always think to transfer somewhere else and avoid AC entirely, so they did it.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago














              8












              8








              8







              Possibly, if you didn't have to re-check your luggage. Canadian immigration is pretty speedy. But it's a tight connection, and a small amount of bad luck could easily lead to a missed flight, and then you'd be stuck in Montreal overnight (a pleasant place to be stuck, but still). I would never ever try it unless it was a single-ticket, guaranteed connection. (And I also wouldn't do it unless I could easily afford the extra costs for overnight accommodation and whatever messes it would make for my destination plans.)






              share|improve this answer















              Possibly, if you didn't have to re-check your luggage. Canadian immigration is pretty speedy. But it's a tight connection, and a small amount of bad luck could easily lead to a missed flight, and then you'd be stuck in Montreal overnight (a pleasant place to be stuck, but still). I would never ever try it unless it was a single-ticket, guaranteed connection. (And I also wouldn't do it unless I could easily afford the extra costs for overnight accommodation and whatever messes it would make for my destination plans.)







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 12 hours ago

























              answered 13 hours ago









              SneftelSneftel

              1,821512




              1,821512













              • I'm always dubious when offered a connected time that's less than an hour. There appear to be earlier flights to Montreal, so gambling on the short connection probably isn't necessary.

                – Jagular
                12 hours ago











              • In addition, I would check if there are similar flights few hours later. In this case the risk is just that you will be put in later flight. But on intercontinental flights, the probability that next flight (with a partner airline) is next day is high.

                – Giacomo Catenazzi
                11 hours ago











              • Not necessarily overnight, I should think. For example, if the scheduled flight is tonight's 9:00 Air Canada departure to London Heathrow, they could re-route the delayed traveler through Toronto in time for the flight that leaves at five minutes after midnight. (@GiacomoCatenazzi)

                – phoog
                11 hours ago






              • 1





                When this happened to me, Air Canada picked up the hotel room.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago






              • 1





                @Sneftel It was, in fact, bad weather which disqualified the intended crew, and I don't believe they were obligated. But international travelers could, I suppose, always think to transfer somewhere else and avoid AC entirely, so they did it.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago



















              • I'm always dubious when offered a connected time that's less than an hour. There appear to be earlier flights to Montreal, so gambling on the short connection probably isn't necessary.

                – Jagular
                12 hours ago











              • In addition, I would check if there are similar flights few hours later. In this case the risk is just that you will be put in later flight. But on intercontinental flights, the probability that next flight (with a partner airline) is next day is high.

                – Giacomo Catenazzi
                11 hours ago











              • Not necessarily overnight, I should think. For example, if the scheduled flight is tonight's 9:00 Air Canada departure to London Heathrow, they could re-route the delayed traveler through Toronto in time for the flight that leaves at five minutes after midnight. (@GiacomoCatenazzi)

                – phoog
                11 hours ago






              • 1





                When this happened to me, Air Canada picked up the hotel room.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago






              • 1





                @Sneftel It was, in fact, bad weather which disqualified the intended crew, and I don't believe they were obligated. But international travelers could, I suppose, always think to transfer somewhere else and avoid AC entirely, so they did it.

                – Andrew Lazarus
                10 hours ago

















              I'm always dubious when offered a connected time that's less than an hour. There appear to be earlier flights to Montreal, so gambling on the short connection probably isn't necessary.

              – Jagular
              12 hours ago





              I'm always dubious when offered a connected time that's less than an hour. There appear to be earlier flights to Montreal, so gambling on the short connection probably isn't necessary.

              – Jagular
              12 hours ago













              In addition, I would check if there are similar flights few hours later. In this case the risk is just that you will be put in later flight. But on intercontinental flights, the probability that next flight (with a partner airline) is next day is high.

              – Giacomo Catenazzi
              11 hours ago





              In addition, I would check if there are similar flights few hours later. In this case the risk is just that you will be put in later flight. But on intercontinental flights, the probability that next flight (with a partner airline) is next day is high.

              – Giacomo Catenazzi
              11 hours ago













              Not necessarily overnight, I should think. For example, if the scheduled flight is tonight's 9:00 Air Canada departure to London Heathrow, they could re-route the delayed traveler through Toronto in time for the flight that leaves at five minutes after midnight. (@GiacomoCatenazzi)

              – phoog
              11 hours ago





              Not necessarily overnight, I should think. For example, if the scheduled flight is tonight's 9:00 Air Canada departure to London Heathrow, they could re-route the delayed traveler through Toronto in time for the flight that leaves at five minutes after midnight. (@GiacomoCatenazzi)

              – phoog
              11 hours ago




              1




              1





              When this happened to me, Air Canada picked up the hotel room.

              – Andrew Lazarus
              10 hours ago





              When this happened to me, Air Canada picked up the hotel room.

              – Andrew Lazarus
              10 hours ago




              1




              1





              @Sneftel It was, in fact, bad weather which disqualified the intended crew, and I don't believe they were obligated. But international travelers could, I suppose, always think to transfer somewhere else and avoid AC entirely, so they did it.

              – Andrew Lazarus
              10 hours ago





              @Sneftel It was, in fact, bad weather which disqualified the intended crew, and I don't believe they were obligated. But international travelers could, I suppose, always think to transfer somewhere else and avoid AC entirely, so they did it.

              – Andrew Lazarus
              10 hours ago











              5














              Air Canada note that 40 minutes is the minimum time, although they note this only applies for Air Canada/Jazz flights. I'd personally want to allow more time though






              share|improve this answer




























                5














                Air Canada note that 40 minutes is the minimum time, although they note this only applies for Air Canada/Jazz flights. I'd personally want to allow more time though






                share|improve this answer


























                  5












                  5








                  5







                  Air Canada note that 40 minutes is the minimum time, although they note this only applies for Air Canada/Jazz flights. I'd personally want to allow more time though






                  share|improve this answer













                  Air Canada note that 40 minutes is the minimum time, although they note this only applies for Air Canada/Jazz flights. I'd personally want to allow more time though







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 12 hours ago









                  qechuaqechua

                  41517




                  41517






























                      draft saved

                      draft discarded




















































                      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.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function () {
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f133791%2fus-to-europe-trip-with-montreal-layover-is-52-minutes-enough%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                      }
                      );

                      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







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Щит и меч (фильм) Содержание Названия серий | Сюжет |...

                      Венесуэла на летних Олимпийских играх 2000 Содержание Состав...

                      Meter-Bus Содержание Параметры шины | Стандартизация |...