It's a for profit company. They are in business to make money. They have an obligation to their shareholders to maximize profits. If people don't buy the more expensive tickets prices will fall. I'm sure you wouldn't complain then.
If you don't like the price of tickets travel on different days. You are traveling on a holiday weekend. It's expensive
As I said above, because I am travelling with schoolteachers, travelling on different days is not an option. We are bound by their school schedules, as are many other families with teachers and students in the family. I am fortunate enough that I can suck it up and pay the higher fares, even though I am not happy about it. I really wonder how some families who have planned their Florida vacations are going to be able to absorb these increases.
Let me put it this way. I have been buying flights for many years, including many over the Easter holidays while my daughters were in school and now that two of them are teachers. I understand that Southwest is a profit making company, as have been all of the other airlines that I have flown with over the years. My expectation for fares is based on the experience I have developed over the years, including the last couple of years with Southwest.
Last April, we flew from MKE to MCO on the Saturday before Easter, just like we are planning to do next spring. Last year, I was not around to book when the fares were first released in the morning, and I paid $198 one way for the outgoing flight. I expected that I wasn't getting the lowest fare offered that day because I wasn't one of the first to book. For the return flight the next Friday (for which the schedule was released about 2 months later) I was in transit to the airport and couldn't check the fares until about 9 AM. I was able to book a flight for $180, and while I was watching the fare went to $200. My daughters, who were able to book earlier in the day, got their flights for $159.
Based on that experience, I think it was reasonable for me to expect this morning that I would be looking at fares of under $200 each way if I booked as soon as the schedule was released. I also think it was reasonable for me to be surprised, and a little upset, to find that the fares had been increased over 50% from last year with no apparent business justification other than to extract from customers the largest amount of flesh they can get away with.
It's no wonder to me that the Justice Department is investigating the airlines for collusion.