
The great airline scam
First off, let me say that I should have read the fine print on the ticket. Of course, it was an e-ticket, so the fine print must be found, somehow, on a bad web site, but that's neither here nor there. I booked a round trip from San Francisco to New York on American.
My plans changed at the last minute as I had a meeting in LA. My best shot was to fly to LA and on to NY on different airlines and return on my existing return ticket. The day of my return, I called AA to check on the flight times and lo-and-behold my reservation was gone. Voided. Annulled. I was told that because I hadn't taken my outbound leg, the entire ticket was cancelled with no refund. There was no phone call (though they had a contact number) and very little sympathy. Ignorance of arcane and illogical rules, apparently, is no excuse.
I ended up paying for the difference in cost between my reservation and a new one way fare - I got lucky - it was only $75. AA said that they were "doing me a favor" because technically they didn't have to credit me the money I already spent.
What is ironic is that carriers with great customer service - JetBlue and Southwest for example - would have kept my return leg and credited me the difference! Logical and useful for travellers whose plans change.
Big carriers take note - the times are changing and you will have to change with them or become obsolete!
Official Replies from American Airlines
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