I thought there was some rule, if your flight changed over so many hours, they had to refund purchase price if requested.
It depends on the airline. For many airlines, the threshold is four hours.I thought there was some rule, if your flight changed over so many hours, they had to refund purchase price if requested.
Often what many airlines do, is allow you to choose another flight that day (and in some cases the day before or day after) without charging you a change fee. Getting your money back is a whole different story. You might be successful in doing so but in most cases they are not obligated to give you your money back.
All your ticket guarantees is passage from point A to point B on the given day. If the airline changes your flight time substantially (widely disparate definitions of this word depending on the airline), they may refund your fare - but then you would need to purchase a ticket on another airline at a much higher price.
Mind if I ask why you're asking? Does your airline have a history of cancelling a flight on which you're already booked? Are you thinking of buying an inexpensive ticket in the hope that the airline will cancel that flight and put you on a more desirable but more expensive one? Something else?
I was just checking, because I'm thinking about canceling trip because of job loss and thought this would be a way out?
(Well, there is generally a specific rule about refunds due to schedule changes; again, often the change has to be > 4 hours. There isn't a specific rule about refunds to do job loss, though -- perhaps that's what you were saying?)
I don't recall any airlines that do not name a specific time-frame. As far as I know, they all specific amount of time.No, the PP probably meant what they wrote. Many airlines say "significant change" or something similar. They do not name a specific time frame required.
I think you meant to say that there is no industry-wide rule. That is true. It was struck-down as part of airline deregulation.And, there is a specific industry-wide rule at all. Though there may be industry-wide generalities.
I don't recall any airlines that do not name a specific time-frame. As far as I know, they all specific amount of time.
I think you meant to say that there is no industry-wide rule. That is true. It was struck-down as part of airline deregulation.
You will most likely be assessed whatever the airline's cancellation fee is, with the rest being put on your airline account as a credit redeemable for a year.I was just checking, because I'm thinking about canceling trip because of job loss and thought this would be a way out?