eoff
Member
I think perhaps I should clarify my point, there are occasions where after boarding the number of people on the plane does not match what is expected from the paperwork at the gate.
They typically sell the number of seats plus a few. And offer a couple hundred dollars to anyone willing to take a later flight if everyone shows up.They only sell as many seats as there are on the plane. Everyone has a ticket, it's just there's no seat number on there
How do they deal with the situation where they have too many or few people on the plane. Quite hard to work out what has gone wrong if people are not in assigned seats.
Although I suspect this is more about being able to offer higher price seats in EJ's case.
I think perhaps I should clarify my point, there are occasions where after boarding the number of people on the plane does not match what is expected from the paperwork at the gate.
They typically sell the number of seats plus a few. And offer a couple hundred dollars to anyone willing to take a later flight if everyone shows up.
That's when the EU 261/2004 regulation punished an airline for overbooking (known as 'bumping' in the trade), if the service wasn't very frequent. O'Leary whined about that for years saying that compensation for a delay should be realted to the fare paid, i.e. not compensation but a partial or full refund, (just like delay repay is). Well he would as many of his (basic) fares were just a few pounds. Had the EU let him get away with that, his airline's behaviour would have been even worse that it was! I don't knowif 261/2004 still applies to UK citizens from this year.... though probably not a huge one as before people who cared about where they sat bought Speedy Boarding.
I've never bothered with speedy boarding even when travelling as a couple, my wife usually snoozes even on short haul so it doesn't matter where we sit. There's been quite a few times where the incoming EJ flight has been sent to a remote stand requiring the passengers to be bussed from the departure lounge. That's when those who paid for speedy boarding wasted their money as there was no way that the 'speedy order' was maintained when nobody knew which side of the bus they were getting on or off. ...
... The main reason for doing overbooking is to deal with people on full-fare flexible tickets who can just not show up and then rebook to another flight - same with hotels, where most offer a "cancel by noon on the day of arrival" sort of rate where the chance of reselling the room is near-zero. The only reason you get it on easyJet or Ryanair is when there's a faulty seat, they're a cabin crew member short or they've swapped from an A320 to an A319. And again, this is from extensive experience flying easyJet, about 200 sectors.
KLM, on the other hand, always overbooked the 1500-ish Schiphol to Heathrow to an utterly ridiculous extent, and had people hacked off about it every single week. ...
That's when the EU 261/2004 regulation punished an airline for overbooking (known as 'bumping' in the trade), if the service wasn't very frequent. O'Leary whined about that for years saying that compensation for a delay should be realted to the fare paid, i.e. not compensation but a partial or full refund, (just like delay repay is). Well he would as many of his (basic) fares were just a few pounds. Had the EU let him get away with that, his airline's behaviour would have been even worse that it was! I don't knowif 261/2004 still applies to UK citizens from this year.
In 2015, we were bumped on an outbound flight LHR-KEF (Reykjavik) after a severe storm cancelled all flights there on the Saturday (in 2015). We had a 24hour delay and on return to LHR, the Sunday flight was overbooked and we were then bumped onto the evening flight from LGW. The compensation was £400 which was more than the fare paid for the outblound journey. I don't agree with your view that compensation should be related to the original fare. That is a refund. Compensation is in recognition of the loss by the passenger which in our case was a day of ouir holiday, which as a minimum included one night's accomodation (not cheap in Iceland). Then there's the loss of holiday time, so £400 was no bonus, - it probably didn't even cover the actual losses. Had the fare been a bargain basement booking, our other losses would have been the same.easyJet and Ryanair haven't been heavily overbooking since well before EU261 was a thing - their business model doesn't require it, because you lose your money if you don't fly. That was firmly aimed at the traditional airlines who, like the KLM example I mentioned above, were doing it all the time.
I do, as an aside, agree with him - the Delay Repay approach of it being a proportion of fare (including taxes and any additional fees paid like baggage, not just the meaningless "base fare") is much more sensible - though he should also be obliged to provide a hotel, evening meal and breakfast if overnight. Though perhaps I would apply an additional "minimum compensation for being bumped from a flight that actually operates" - remember that EU261 doesn't just apply to being bumped, it also applies to cancellations or long delays, provided it wasn't caused by weather or similar. Indeed I've never been bumped (I was offered voluntary once but didn't take it because I didn't like the alternative offered), the only time I've ever had EU261 was a cancellation due to staff shortage, and it was well in excess of the fare paid.
KLM, on the other hand, always overbooked the 1500-ish Schiphol to Heathrow to an utterly ridiculous extent, and had people hacked off about it every single week.
In 2015, we were bumped on an outbound flight LHR-KEF (Reykjavik) after a severe storm cancelled all flights there on the Saturday (in 2015). We had a 24hour delay and on return to LHR, the Sunday flight was overbooked and we were then bumped onto the evening flight from LGW. The compensation was £400 which was more than the fare paid for the outblound journey. I don't agree with your view that compensation should be related to the original fare. That is a refund. Compensation is in recognition of the loss by the passenger which in our case was a day of ouir holiday, which as a minimum included one night's accomodation (not cheap in Iceland). Then there's the loss of holiday time, so £400 was no bonus, - it probably didn't even cover the actual losses. Had the fare been a bargain basement booking, our other losses would have been the same.
I was speaking to Southwestern, not EasyJet. Overbooking is far less common under EU regulations than in the USA.To be fair, easyJet don't do an awful lot of overbooking, it isn't necessary with their business model because if you don't show up you lose your money.
EU261 isn't intended to compensate for consequential loss, which is why it's a fixed amount. It's supposed to compensate for the airline not providing the contracted service. If it was to compensate for consequential loss then you would need to submit receipts, etc.I don't consider it reasonable for transport operators to have to compensate for consequential loss in any form*.
I was speaking to Southwestern, not EasyJet. Overbooking is far less common under EU regulations than in the USA.
They typically sell the number of seats plus a few. And offer a couple hundred dollars to anyone willing to take a later flight if everyone shows up.
It can also be that the seats have been sold to codeshare partners, who haven't then been able to on-sell them to passengers.Also remember that some times the flight is "oversold" not because there are more tickets sold than seats, but because the freight being carried is more valuable or time sensitive than a few passengers and the cost of 2bouncing"them to a hotel with a wad of money.
It can also be that the seats have been sold to codeshare partners, who haven't then been able to on-sell them to passengers.
Depends. Some airlines are tightly integrated and operate a common/linked booking system (e.g. AA/BA/IB) where you can use a booking reference generated by one airline to check in on the other's website. In other cases there's a codeshare arrangement but it operates on the block assignment basis. I believe this is still the case with BA/QF and DL/SQ.Do they really still do quotas like that rather than just having a live interface between the two booking systems so any given seat can be booked under either flight code?
Well BA anb IB are part of the same corporation, and probably share a common ticket network anyway.Depends. Some airlines are tightly integrated and operate a common/linked booking system (e.g. AA/BA/IB) where you can use a booking reference generated by one airline to check in on the other's website. In other cases there's a codeshare arrangement but it operates on the block assignment basis. I believe this is still the case with BA/QF and DL/SQ.
Yes, they're both owned by IAG, but as far as I'm aware their booking systems are separate but speak with each other in real-time. Other airlines whose systems speak with IAG include RJ and AY.Well BA anb IB are part of the same corporation, and probably share a common ticket network anyway.
Aer Lingus hopes to begin marketing Manchester > US flights from this Friday (8th January 2021). We should then find out the routes and operating details.
I see those being *reallY* well patronised if they start any time soon. Not.
I’m minded to agree!
There are actually some Aer Lingus fares lurking in the distribution systems which are only valid for travel from 1st July to the 31st August this year.
I can’t currently see when they were loaded, but they could be a precursor to the flights themselves being loaded for an initially short operating season.
Prague is great, both for general sightseeing and interesting transport. Probably not quite as cheap as it was.
Why has Aer Lingus been given 5th freedom rights between the UK and USA?Circling back on this, Aer Lingus has now loaded availability for three new direct routes from Manchester to New York, Orlando and Barbados.
There will be daily-ops to New York (JFK) from the 29th July 2021, and five times weekly to Orlando from the same date.
Barbados will be thrice-weekly commencing 20th October 2021.
The routes would appear to be aimed fairly squarely at competing with Virgin Atlantic, and also filling some of the space left by Thomas Cook.
Flights will be operated by a new U.K. company, Aer Lingus (U.K.) LimitedWhy has Aer Lingus been given 5th freedom rights between the UK and USA?
AKA British Airways 2.0.Flights will be operated by a new U.K. company, Aer Lingus (U.K.) Limited
Correct in >99% of cases. There are rare exceptions. The infamous United Airlines dragging off a passenger already seated - about 2 years ago.Yes, but that's dealt with before they even start boarding, they don't have everyone cram on then ask a few to get off when there are not enough seats!![]()
Even rarer now. The FAA has been tightening up their enforcement of the rules around overbooking and the Airline Passenger Bill of Rights has been introduced in Congress. If passed this would give US passengers compensation rights that are in line with EU261.But in general it is rare.
Yes indeed and about time too in my humble opinion. There must absolutely be no more Doctor David Dao type incidents ever again.Even rarer now. The FAA has been tightening up their enforcement of the rules around overbooking and the Airline Passenger Bill of Rights has been introduced in Congress. If passed this would give US passengers compensation rights that are in line with EU261.
Prague is great, both for general sightseeing and interesting transport. Probably not quite as cheap as it was.
Then myself on September 19th 2010 also United. I flew from PDX - DEN - on UA but it was a very hot summer day in Denver. Anyway I boarded my next flight from Denver to Atlanta. Announcement. Sorry. Denver is already > 1 mile high and with the heat the lift just would not be there. Captain refused to take off because of this. GA came on and asked for 4 people to volunteer to get off the aircraft. I did, was given $300 compensation and put on a Frontier Airlines flight leaving two hours later.
Has anyone flown to Eastern Europe and if so is there any destination that can be recommended? I've been to Estonia so anywhere apart from there.