Honeymoon
I shall shortly be using my BA shareholder status to book flights for my daughter and future son-in law for flights to Los Angeles and Las Vegas. How is it best to notify BA of their honeymoon?
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Originally Posted by botham
(Post 15940075)
I shall shortly be using my BA shareholder status to book flights for my daughter and future son-in law for flights to Los Angeles and Las Vegas. How is it best to notify BA of their honeymoon?
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Originally Posted by botham
(Post 15940075)
I shall shortly be using my BA shareholder status to book flights for my daughter and future son-in law for flights to Los Angeles and Las Vegas. How is it best to notify BA of their honeymoon?
That aside, once you have made the booking, you could just call BA with their PNR. |
Originally Posted by botham
(Post 15940075)
I shall shortly be using my BA shareholder status to book flights for my daughter and future son-in law for flights to Los Angeles and Las Vegas. How is it best to notify BA of their honeymoon?
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Originally Posted by BOH
(Post 15940091)
Why would you want to notify BA? And why would BA be interested? :confused:
To the op - once you have a PNR maybe call BA and see if you can buy a bottle of champagne for the happy couple (assuming they aren't in J+). If they have hopes of an upgrade you might want to dampen those |
Originally Posted by BOH
(Post 15940091)
Why would you want to notify BA? And why would BA be interested? :confused:
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Originally Posted by LTN Phobia
(Post 15940095)
I thought the shareholder needed to be part of the travelling party?
That aside, once you have made the booking, you could just call BA with their PNR. 2. Subject to these terms and conditions, the Member is entitled, with up to eight additional travel companions on the same booking and paying at the same time, to a discount of 10 per cent on any BA published fare for leisure travel only (the ‘Shareholder Discount’). This discount applies to flight only and cannot be used when combined with a package (e.g. hotel, car hire, excursion or car parking). The Member and any travelling companions on the booking must travel together on all flights throughout the journey and have the same booking reference i.e. booked on the same booking. If you were talking about getting something for nothing I'd refer you to the current thread Down with these saddo upgrade hustlers :p |
Originally Posted by firstclasslad
(Post 15940129)
I'm looking forward to botham's response....
Originally Posted by LondonAndy
(Post 15940142)
If you were talking about getting something for nothing I'd refer you to the current thread Down with these saddo upgrade hustlers :p |
Originally Posted by LondonAndy
(Post 15940142)
Absolutely right - the terms and conditions are very clear on this, and I enclose an extract below:
2. Subject to these terms and conditions, the Member is entitled, with up to eight additional travel companions on the same booking and paying at the same time, to a discount of 10 per cent on any BA published fare for leisure travel only (the ‘Shareholder Discount’). This discount applies to flight only and cannot be used when combined with a package (e.g. hotel, car hire, excursion or car parking). The Member and any travelling companions on the booking must travel together on all flights throughout the journey and have the same booking reference i.e. booked on the same booking. In that case, if I were the OP, there is absolutely no way I would book the honeymoon using my shareholder discount, even if the transaction goes through successfully, because there is no way I would risk disrupting their honeymoon by breaching the T&C. Can you imagine the tickets being invalidated just as they were about to leave for their honeymoon? |
Slight OT.
When I used to work in T4, BA used to handle Air Lanka. It was the one flight, where maybe 30/40 % of pax were on honey moon. So you can imagine checking pax in, and time and time again been asked "Any chance of an upgrade, we are on honeymoon?". 218 |
There are around a quarter of a million weddings in the UK each year. So that means that roughly half a million people go on some sort of honeymoon. Given BA's long-haul network it must have a pretty good share of this market (of course not everyone goes long-haul, or even overseas). So BA must transport tens of thousands of honeymooners each year.
If they are in economy and manage to subtly mention to the crew they might be lucky and get a glass of champagne, but I think that's about it. I think the chances of a free upgrade are about the same as anyone else with the same status. If they want a J or F experience it's best to pay for it. When I got married we didn't have much spare cash, we flew economy (we hadn't flown anything other than economy at that time) and we had a great time. I would urge the OP not to create even a hint of an expectation of anything special here, otherwise they will most likely end up disappointed. |
Originally Posted by botham
(Post 15940075)
How is it best to notify BA of their honeymoon?
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Recently I was on EK 380 and in the upper deck there was me and another young couple, they were honeymooners on their way to the Maldives. The crew went out of their way, they provided them with a bottle of champagne in their compartment, a whole cake. Took pictures of them and threw rose petals on their beds.... It was really a wonderful jestet that I hope this young couple will never forget.
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"Alas, poor Botham, we knew him well." ;)
Mind you, it's a good job he posted that, as the responses may well have saved him dropping into the doggy-doos. Now ... I'll be flying on our wedding anniversary. Should I mention that at check-in? |
Originally Posted by T8191
(Post 15940407)
Now ... I'll be flying on our wedding anniversary. Should I mention that at check-in?
:D |
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