Legal ramifications for booking return as a one-way
Hi,
We are travelling internationally as a family of four and need to fly back to the US from South Africa. However, the difference between a round-trip and one way fare is significant (several thousands of dollars). I am tempted to just book the return and not use it and book it 3 months later to save the money. I have read reports of airlines coming after the passengers for the difference of fares. Do you think this is worth the risk? We do not live in North America anymore if that makes any difference. |
Technically you would be breaking Contract of Carriage, which is not a legal thing per se, though airline can take legal action by taking pax to court, which would be a legal action.
Perhaps the most famous case was United (IIRC) v. Skiplagged.com, where UA got spanked and Skiplagged is still going strong. I also recall Lufthansa actually winning, but IIRC losing on appeal, but that too was for missing last leg, not return journey. They did win the case against the guy buying refundable Biz tickets and using the airport lounge to get free access before cancelling the tix, but that's something entirely different ;) Lots of discussion about that in various airline fora, mostly under "missing last leg of journey," or words to that effect. I recall much less discussion about your particular situation, but it has come up. Things change in three months, sickness happens, family crisis happens, and especially with a one off there probably isn't much to worry about, especially if you don't use your Frequent Flyer account. Not much point in that these days as earnings from flights are minuscule, and elite benefits are pretty limited even if one has elite status. One thing to consider is open jaw, in case you can find a different destination where you would actually want to go (and potentially get back from). Now that I think about it, saw that at least on some routes, United (having lifetime UA status I tend to try to stick with them for the Int'l travel benefits, i.e. lounge access) had some flights to Asia for half the price of r/t :) Also, Google Flights is your friend. |
Originally Posted by snowbeavers
(Post 31938991)
Hi,
We are travelling internationally as a family of four and need to fly back to the US from South Africa. However, the difference between a round-trip and one way fare is significant (several thousands of dollars). I am tempted to just book the return and not use it and book it 3 months later to save the money. I have read reports of airlines coming after the passengers for the difference of fares. Do you think this is worth the risk? We do not live in North America anymore if that makes any difference. I would probably book the return portion out as far as possible on the calendar and hope for an airline schedule change to hit and benefit me. |
Originally Posted by GUWonder
(Post 31944762)
I would probably book the return portion out as far as possible on the calendar and hope for an airline schedule change to hit and benefit me.
I also liked EmailKid's suggestion of the open-jaw ticket, with the return to someplace entirely different you'd like to visit. Could work. While one never absolutely knows, I agree that the odds of getting hounded for not using a return portion are really low. I've personally done it with no problems. |
Great, thanks for the responses. How would I book an open-jaw ticket? I don't seem that feature available on most airlines sites. Different than multi-city right?
|
Originally Posted by snowbeavers
(Post 31947242)
Great, thanks for the responses. How would I book an open-jaw ticket? I don't seem that feature available on most airlines sites. Different than multi-city right?
|
Yes, the open-jaw ticket would be booked using the multi-city option, as opposed to the one-way and round-trip options.
---- I'm sure somebody here will refine my understanding, but just to get it started... Assuming the ticket is A-B, and then B-C, I think A and C have to be in the same continent? |
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