FYI,
Delta may have some odd notations on you reciept/itinerary that you might receive by email (ie. electronic tickets).
As I'm printing off my tickets for our Saturday flight, I notice a strange notation on a leg of our trip when we return the following Friday.
We have a flight that leaves Orlando and connects/changes in Atlanta.
Next to the ATL arrival time is a "pound mark" or #.
I look at the key, and it says #=Arrival date different than departure date!!!!
Now common sense tells me this is just an error, but there is no way I'm trusting Delta. The regular CS number gets me someone in a country far, far, away from here. She has no clue, and her response is to resend our etickets, With no idea what to do if they show the same term notation.
Needless to say, as predicted, the new e-tickets have the same notation.
I do finally get wonderful assistance with the gentleman I speak with next using the SkyMiles member number. He jokingly reassures me that I will not be flying from Orlando to Atlanta by way of Buenos Aires!
So, for your reference.....the # notation may or may not mean your arrival date is different than your departure date.
The # notation can mean that they have noted that a possible time change may occur for the flight.
In our case, the flight arrives 3 minutes earlier.
Delta may have some odd notations on you reciept/itinerary that you might receive by email (ie. electronic tickets).
As I'm printing off my tickets for our Saturday flight, I notice a strange notation on a leg of our trip when we return the following Friday.
We have a flight that leaves Orlando and connects/changes in Atlanta.
Next to the ATL arrival time is a "pound mark" or #.
I look at the key, and it says #=Arrival date different than departure date!!!!

Now common sense tells me this is just an error, but there is no way I'm trusting Delta. The regular CS number gets me someone in a country far, far, away from here. She has no clue, and her response is to resend our etickets, With no idea what to do if they show the same term notation.

I do finally get wonderful assistance with the gentleman I speak with next using the SkyMiles member number. He jokingly reassures me that I will not be flying from Orlando to Atlanta by way of Buenos Aires!

So, for your reference.....the # notation may or may not mean your arrival date is different than your departure date.
The # notation can mean that they have noted that a possible time change may occur for the flight.
In our case, the flight arrives 3 minutes earlier.
