Apply Delta Voucher After Purchasing Ticket
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 139
Apply Delta Voucher After Purchasing Ticket
Looking to book a flight on Delta, but I need an invoice with the full price for reimbursement purposes. Anyone know if Delta will let you adjust the booking and apply a voucher after booking the flight?
#2
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Again, up to you if you are OK with submitting a full price for reimbursement when you paid less.
#3
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 3,394
There are ways to accomplish what you want, but this sounds ethically gray at best, fraud at worst.
#4
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I don't see an ethical issue assuming we are talking about a DL eCert of some sort. That should be valued by the OP the same as cash, IMO. What is the ethical issue if the OP is deciding to use two forms of payment?
#5
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The receipt shows the full price of the ticket and the breakdown of the payment.
I don't see what's so unethical about using non-credit card forms of payment. You don't know where the OP got the voucher from. Maybe it's just credit for a cancelled flight that he wants to burn before expiration.
I don't see what's so unethical about using non-credit card forms of payment. You don't know where the OP got the voucher from. Maybe it's just credit for a cancelled flight that he wants to burn before expiration.
#6
Original Poster
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 139
The receipt shows the full price of the ticket and the breakdown of the payment.
I don't see what's so unethical about using non-credit card forms of payment. You don't know where the OP got the voucher from. Maybe it's just credit for a cancelled flight that he wants to burn before expiration.
I don't see what's so unethical about using non-credit card forms of payment. You don't know where the OP got the voucher from. Maybe it's just credit for a cancelled flight that he wants to burn before expiration.
#7
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IMO, this is just as if you had decided to use credit card for a meal and then tip in cash. Both are the same from an expense purpose and both should be reimbursed by your employer.
#8
Join Date: Oct 2009
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Maybe I'm missing something here, but this doesn't sound unethical. If you have a $200 voucher in your Delta account, isn't that your money as much as using your credit card to pay for a ticket?
#9
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The receipt shows the full price of the ticket and the breakdown of the payment.
I don't see what's so unethical about using non-credit card forms of payment. You don't know where the OP got the voucher from. Maybe it's just credit for a cancelled flight that he wants to burn before expiration.
I don't see what's so unethical about using non-credit card forms of payment. You don't know where the OP got the voucher from. Maybe it's just credit for a cancelled flight that he wants to burn before expiration.
#10
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paid less how? Submitting two forms of payment doesn't mean the price decreased.
#11
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Traveling the World
Posts: 6,075
If the company owns the voucher I would forward it to the company and tell them to use it for your next trip and then they could cover the remaining amount.
Either way don't do something that could go against your company policy which is good to know about who owns the voucher and if you forward it to them they would use it for your next trip as you are the named passenger on the voucher and then use their company card for the rest.
If you go under your Delta.com account and you view the receipt it will show
Payment
Ticket#0123451020
Total $1000
Voucher 33222999-$500
Credit Card VI XXXX1234 $500
Any residual value of unused funds goes back to the voucher. I used an IDB Voucher and a Service Recovery Voucher to pay for my trip to Paris whatever was left over was returned to me or if the ticket costs more it would go to your credit card.
On your Credit Card statement it would say Delta.com Ticket Collection Fee or something along those lines.
If you use a corporate credit card and travel agent your company has the right to view your receipts and could require you to submit the Ticket# receipt that shows its been ticketed.
What the OP is trying to do is not ethical and is not a legal receipt. I could go to a store purchase an item pay cash get a receipt and then submit it to my company for reimbursement. Its not ethical and is very shifty.
Just be up front with your boss/HR.
The reason your company potentially owns the voucher is because they originally booked you on that flight under a company expense. Now if you were to use the voucher for a non company expense your employer could argue you were using company money even if its free to book a vacation. Yes you were delayed but if you were on company time they could argue that it was lost time that you could have been in the office or at your conference or meeting.
If you asked your company if you could use your voucher for personal travel and they agree then fine if not then I am afraid you would be forced to use the voucher for company travel or let it expire. The voucher is in your name yes and the terms state that it cannot be transferred to another passenger. So you the named passenger must use it according to your company travel policy which by the way is important to know before you get called in to your boss's office for an infraction and potentially get fired if they find out.
Last edited by danielonn; Mar 28, 2017 at 3:57 pm
#12
Join Date: Jun 2004
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Submit the $1000 to the company as an expense item and pocket the $500.
Yes, it is clear an absolute fraud, not gray as some assert. In some cases that cert would be worth $500, in others it would be nearly worthless.
The OP should simply buy the ticket with $500 + cert to begin with, and put that down on the expense the report. State the value of the cert spent and justify it. Or as the previous poster said, simply discuss in advance.
If one uses non cash value for company expense, they are entitled to expense it. But not entitled to lie and claim it is cash.
#13
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OP is talking about buying a ticket at say $1000, getting the receipt, then using a voucher to pay it down to $500.
Submit the $1000 to the company as an expense item and pocket the $500.
Yes, it is clear an absolute fraud, not gray as some assert. In some cases that cert would be worth $500, in others it would be nearly worthless.
The OP should simply buy the ticket with $500 + cert to begin with, and put that down on the expense the report. State the value of the cert spent and justify it. Or as the previous poster said, simply discuss in advance.
If one uses non cash value for company expense, they are entitled to expense it. But not entitled to lie and claim it is cash.
Submit the $1000 to the company as an expense item and pocket the $500.
Yes, it is clear an absolute fraud, not gray as some assert. In some cases that cert would be worth $500, in others it would be nearly worthless.
The OP should simply buy the ticket with $500 + cert to begin with, and put that down on the expense the report. State the value of the cert spent and justify it. Or as the previous poster said, simply discuss in advance.
If one uses non cash value for company expense, they are entitled to expense it. But not entitled to lie and claim it is cash.
If I did this and my company found out I would be terminated. No gray areas.
Turning in a false receipt for reimbursement is fraud.
#14
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Remember that the first receipt will have a different ticket number. You'd be turning in a receipt for reimbursement for an item that was returned to the seller for a full refund. If you're required to submit boarding passes, it's easy to catch as the boarding pass has the ticket number.
#15
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Traveling the World
Posts: 6,075
OP is talking about buying a ticket at say $1000, getting the receipt, then using a voucher to pay it down to $500.
Submit the $1000 to the company as an expense item and pocket the $500.
Yes, it is clear an absolute fraud, not gray as some assert. In some cases that cert would be worth $500, in others it would be nearly worthless.
The OP should simply buy the ticket with $500 + cert to begin with, and put that down on the expense the report. State the value of the cert spent and justify it. Or as the previous poster said, simply discuss in advance.
If one uses non cash value for company expense, they are entitled to expense it. But not entitled to lie and claim it is cash.
Submit the $1000 to the company as an expense item and pocket the $500.
Yes, it is clear an absolute fraud, not gray as some assert. In some cases that cert would be worth $500, in others it would be nearly worthless.
The OP should simply buy the ticket with $500 + cert to begin with, and put that down on the expense the report. State the value of the cert spent and justify it. Or as the previous poster said, simply discuss in advance.
If one uses non cash value for company expense, they are entitled to expense it. But not entitled to lie and claim it is cash.