Originally Posted by
mcgol
Thank you everyone for your quick responses, your responses are incredibly helpful. Would you mind commenting on some follow up questions that arose:
When you talk about the "gateway being changed", are you suggesting that if one of the DUB sectors got cancelled I could request that this particular flight is taken out of the itinerary completely and I start/end the trip in LHR, or how could the 300 miles gateway be applied in practice, as it's not something that I am familiar with?
Could I move the DUB-LHR flight forward / LHR-DUB backward a few days so not to have them at the front/end of the trip? So in this case the order stays as is (start in DUB and end in DUB), but I don't need to do the turnarounds at the beginning and end of the trip, so I'd do it as 3 trips. LHR-DUB-LHR one day, then then LHR-USA TP run and then, a few days/weeks later, do the last segment of the trip to fly LHR-DUB-LHR - of course it also makes the luggage issue for the long haul trip much easier.
If this is possible, does one/both of those DUB flights need to be cancelled to do this, or could this be done through a cancellation of any of the other segments in the trip? I know that BA let's you move both segments in a 'standard return flight itinerary' even if only one of the flights got cancelled, but does this keep applying for itineraries with more than 2 segments and flights operated not by BA (but on a BA codeshare)?
Is there any more information that you'd need to help answer this?
If a flight is cancelled in your itinerary then you can take a full refund for the trip, take a full refund for just that flight or the change of gateway option is to change to an alternative airport within 300 miles.
So in practice the change of gateway policy could be used so that you could start your journey in Belfast instead of Dublin.
Note that the change of gateway policy would only apply to the flight that is cancelled.