In the grand tradition of aviation blunders that make you simultaneously cringe and laugh until your sides hurt, we present the tale of one unlucky traveler who learned the hard way that not all Santiagos are created equal. What was supposed to be a journey to the vibrant capital of Chile — a city of six million people nestled against the Andes — turned into an unexpected pilgrimage to the medieval cobblestones of Santiago de Compostela, Spain. On the wrong continent. In the wrong hemisphere.
Intended Destination: Santiago, Chile (SCL) — South America, 12+ hour flight
Actual Destination: Santiago de Compostela, Spain (SCQ) — Europe, ~2 hour flight
Distance Between the Two: Approximately 10,400 km (6,460 miles)
How She Found Out: Mid-flight realization that something was very, very wrong
Continent Discrepancy: Yes, an entire continent

The Two-Hour Flight That Should Have Been a Red Flag
Let’s start with the most glorious detail of this story: the flight time. Santiago, Chile is a solid twelve to fourteen hours from most European hubs. Santiago de Compostela, tucked into the lush green corner of northwestern Spain, is roughly two hours from major European airports. Two hours. That’s barely enough time to watch a single episode of a prestige TV drama, let alone cross an ocean and most of a continent.
Our protagonist — whose identity has been mercifully kept private by most outlets — reportedly booked what she believed was a ticket to Chile. The exact sequence of clicks, currency confusions, and auto-complete catastrophes that led to her purchasing a ticket to Spain may never be fully reconstructed. But we can imagine the moment. You’re on a booking site. You type “Santiago.” Two options appear. You click the first one. You’ve just changed your vacation from empanadas and pisco sours in the shadow of the Andes to octopus and Albariño wine on the Camino de Santiago.
The realization reportedly dawned mid-flight, which raises the delightful question of what triggered it. Was it the flight tracker showing a trajectory that curved east instead of south? Was it the suspiciously short estimated arrival time? Did she glance at her boarding pass and wonder why a twelve-hour flight had her landing in time for a late lunch? We may never know, but we can savor the mental image of that precise moment of dawning horror.
A Proud Tradition of Geographic Confusion
Before we judge too harshly, let’s acknowledge that this woman has joined an illustrious — if embarrassing — club. The history of aviation is littered with passengers who ended up in spectacularly wrong places, and the common thread is almost always a city name shared by multiple locations around the globe.

There’s the classic tale of travelers bound for Sydney, Australia who found themselves in Sidney, Montana — population roughly 6,000 and notably lacking an opera house. There are the multiple instances of passengers heading to Portland, Oregon who wound up in Portland, Maine, discovering lobster rolls instead of food trucks. Birmingham, Alabama versus Birmingham, England has claimed its share of victims too.
But the Santiago mix-up carries a special poetry. Santiago de Compostela is the endpoint of the famous Camino de Santiago, one of the world’s great pilgrimage routes. For centuries, travelers have journeyed there intentionally, walking hundreds of kilometers to reach the cathedral where the remains of St. James are said to rest. Our heroine made the pilgrimage involuntarily, and by airplane, which feels like the most spectacular shortcut in the history of religious tourism.
The Silver Lining: Santiago de Compostela Is Actually Wonderful
Here’s the thing about accidentally flying to the wrong city: sometimes the wrong city turns out to be magnificent. Santiago de Compostela is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Its old town is a labyrinth of granite arcades, Romanesque churches, and tapas bars where the octopus is tender and the Galician wine flows freely. The cathedral, freshly restored, is one of the great architectural achievements of medieval Europe.
Is it Santiago, Chile? No. Does it have the Andes? It does not. Can you take a day trip to Valparaíso? Absolutely not. But can you eat percebes — alien-looking barnacles that taste like the concentrated essence of the Atlantic Ocean — while sitting in a thousand-year-old plaza? You absolutely can. And honestly, that’s not a bad consolation prize for a booking error.
The passenger reportedly took the situation in stride after the initial shock, which is either a testament to her resilience or evidence that Santiago de Compostela’s charm is genuinely impossible to resist. She was eventually rebooked to her actual destination, though the details of that rebooking — and the associated costs — remain between her and her credit card company.
Lessons for the Rest of Us
If this story teaches us anything, it’s the value of the three-second pause before confirming a booking. Check the airport code. Check the flight time. If your journey to South America appears to take less time than your morning commute, something has gone wrong. And for the love of all that is holy, look at which continent the little airplane icon on the flight tracker is heading toward.
Travel booking platforms bear some responsibility here too. When a user types “Santiago,” the interface should make it blindingly obvious which Santiago they’re selecting. A simple flag icon, a continent label, or even a flight time estimate next to each option could prevent these mix-ups entirely. Until that happens, the burden falls on travelers to double-check — and on the rest of us to enjoy these stories with the appropriate mixture of sympathy and barely suppressed laughter.
But also — and this is the optimistic reading — maybe the universe sometimes sends you where you need to go instead of where you planned to go. Santiago de Compostela has been welcoming weary travelers for over a thousand years. It just usually expects them to arrive on foot, not by bewildered accident from Gate B7.
Sources: Travel industry reports, airport code databases (IATA), Santiago de Compostela tourism authority




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