Carrier Interface Charge / "CIC"
#61
Join Date: Dec 2021
Posts: 44
This is correct they are unable to sell Discount Den Fares at the airport.
You can add your trip to your profile after you book it and it will update with your 100k elite and then go into manage my booking and add seats and bags. The only issue you will face is that the works is only available at initial booking and you would miss out on the refundability aspect of it due to this.
You can add your trip to your profile after you book it and it will update with your 100k elite and then go into manage my booking and add seats and bags. The only issue you will face is that the works is only available at initial booking and you would miss out on the refundability aspect of it due to this.
#62




Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: ORD
Programs: Bonvoy Titanium
Posts: 223
I saw a post from 2018 saying there was a $25 ticketing fee charged. Has anyone who has recently purchased a ticket say if this is still the case, or are there any other fees? The CIC for my itinerary is $33 so any fees would pretty much make it not worth the trip. Just want to make sure the airport cost is indeed the (non Discount Den) web price minus the CIC.
#63


Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Greater Chicagoland Area
Programs: frontier Elite, Hertz PC
Posts: 1,802
I saw a post from 2018 saying there was a $25 ticketing fee charged. Has anyone who has recently purchased a ticket say if this is still the case, or are there any other fees? The CIC for my itinerary is $33 so any fees would pretty much make it not worth the trip. Just want to make sure the airport cost is indeed the (non Discount Den) web price minus the CIC.
Flights that have two segments (e.g. Ord-DEN-LAS) will have an even larger CIC.
Sometimes, with very cheap flights, there is no carrier interface charge and it usually these flights which end up cheaper with discount den. I've booked almost all my flights at airport as about 90% of them were cheaper there vs Discount Den.
#64
Join Date: Dec 2021
Posts: 44
Unlike with Spirit flights, where airport price can end up being more than their version of the interface fee, with Frontier, the price at airport is the regular price, minus CIC. I have not had this not be the case and I've booked flights almost every week or every other week since Oct.
Flights that have two segments (e.g. Ord-DEN-LAS) will have an even larger CIC.
Sometimes, with very cheap flights, there is no carrier interface charge and it usually these flights which end up cheaper with discount den. I've booked almost all my flights at airport as about 90% of them were cheaper there vs Discount Den.
Flights that have two segments (e.g. Ord-DEN-LAS) will have an even larger CIC.
Sometimes, with very cheap flights, there is no carrier interface charge and it usually these flights which end up cheaper with discount den. I've booked almost all my flights at airport as about 90% of them were cheaper there vs Discount Den.
#65


Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Greater Chicagoland Area
Programs: frontier Elite, Hertz PC
Posts: 1,802
Also one can book for other people: just need their name and birthdate.
I'll have 100k after my next trip because of the promo so we'll see how those perks get added.
If you see one of the other threads, the elite perks are only supposed to apply after you have gained status even though it doesn't say so on the website... When I achieved 50k, I couldn't book stretch seats ahead of time and that was the reason I was given. I'm just waiting to book trips after I reach 100k so I don't have to fight them for those benefits for any more flights than the 2 I already have booked for 2022.
#66
Join Date: Jan 2022
Posts: 70
Orlando Airport
Hello everyone. Read the entire thread and seems people have gotten different results at different counters. Can anyone provide insight on the counter at MCO? Does it charge a counter booking fee? Will the counter rep allow me to use my elite status to get stretch seats, bags, family bundling, etc, or if not, will I be able to add the perks on the internet afterwards without paying CIC? Also, whats best time in the day to go? Thanks in advance. The airport is a bit of a drive for me but may be worth it if Orlando counter does not have same problems as others reported on here. .
Last edited by ericjenrique; Jan 12, 2022 at 6:41 am
#67




Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Panam
Programs: AA EXP, Hyatt Priv Travel Advisor, Marriott LT Silver, IHG Diamond Ambassador
Posts: 510
Unlike with Spirit flights, where airport price can end up being more than their version of the interface fee, with Frontier, the price at airport is the regular price, minus CIC. I have not had this not be the case and I've booked flights almost every week or every other week since Oct.
Flights that have two segments (e.g. Ord-DEN-LAS) will have an even larger CIC.
Sometimes, with very cheap flights, there is no carrier interface charge and it usually these flights which end up cheaper with discount den. I've booked almost all my flights at airport as about 90% of them were cheaper there vs Discount Den.
Flights that have two segments (e.g. Ord-DEN-LAS) will have an even larger CIC.
Sometimes, with very cheap flights, there is no carrier interface charge and it usually these flights which end up cheaper with discount den. I've booked almost all my flights at airport as about 90% of them were cheaper there vs Discount Den.
Any experience on the recent schedules from MDW? Never visited/used it in my life, but looking forward.
#68
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Nov 2018
Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Programs: TK Elite Plus,BAEC GGL,ITA Executive, AFKL Gold,QR Gold,HH Diamond,Bonvoy Gold,ALL Gold
Posts: 14,186
As an update, I was flying another US airline the past week on a domestic route and my intention was to by two domestic F9 tickets without paying the CIC ( they were both connecting itineraries so was going to save $46 per ticket ); the airport that I departed did had a Frontier departure nearby but all employees at the check-in desk were outsourced ( had a polo shirt or sweater of the ground handling company rather than the green polo shirts or light-gray hoodies with the Frontier logo ) and they told me that the system wouldn't let them ticket anything unless departing from that airport. Is this something new as I experienced this for the first time and two employees tried it on two different computers multiple times. Is this a new restriction? I would totally understand if they do have an agreement with the third party ground handling company getting a commission or fixed rates on the tickets sold by their end. Does anyone have more insight or experience with this?
In the end, the arrival airport of my flight had 2 Frontier flights so the desks were open and was manned with proper Frontier employees and a professional agent was able to issue those two tickets within 3-4 minutes.
In the end, the arrival airport of my flight had 2 Frontier flights so the desks were open and was manned with proper Frontier employees and a professional agent was able to issue those two tickets within 3-4 minutes.
#69


Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: TOL
Posts: 1,042
As an update, I was flying another US airline the past week on a domestic route and my intention was to by two domestic F9 tickets without paying the CIC ( they were both connecting itineraries so was going to save $46 per ticket ); the airport that I departed did had a Frontier departure nearby but all employees at the check-in desk were outsourced ( had a polo shirt or sweater of the ground handling company rather than the green polo shirts or light-gray hoodies with the Frontier logo ) and they told me that the system wouldn't let them ticket anything unless departing from that airport. Is this something new as I experienced this for the first time and two employees tried it on two different computers multiple times. Is this a new restriction? I would totally understand if they do have an agreement with the third party ground handling company getting a commission or fixed rates on the tickets sold by their end. Does anyone have more insight or experience with this?
In the end, the arrival airport of my flight had 2 Frontier flights so the desks were open and was manned with proper Frontier employees and a professional agent was able to issue those two tickets within 3-4 minutes.
In the end, the arrival airport of my flight had 2 Frontier flights so the desks were open and was manned with proper Frontier employees and a professional agent was able to issue those two tickets within 3-4 minutes.
I've never had an issue purchasing a ticket at an airport to depart from any city Frontier serves (as recently as October 6). If this restriction were true, it would be impossible to book multi-city itineraries or even a one-way ticket to arrive at the airport you are purchasing the ticket at. I find it more likely the agents you encountered at the first airport either didn't know how to change the departure city (which is easy to do) or just didn't want to take the time to sell a ticket. I would report this experience to Frontier so they can reinforce proper procedures to their ground handler at this airport if this is a common issue. Your experience at the second airport is more typical and affirms that nothing has changed, at least in my view.
#70
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Nov 2018
Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Programs: TK Elite Plus,BAEC GGL,ITA Executive, AFKL Gold,QR Gold,HH Diamond,Bonvoy Gold,ALL Gold
Posts: 14,186
I don't think any airport stations actually have agents employed by Frontier. Even CSRs at DEN are outsourced to a handling company. The outstation agents likely work flights for multiple airlines so your luck may be better at "major" F9 cities like DEN, LAS, MCO, PHL, ATL, etc.
I've never had an issue purchasing a ticket at an airport to depart from any city Frontier serves (as recently as October 6). If this restriction were true, it would be impossible to book multi-city itineraries or even a one-way ticket to arrive at the airport you are purchasing the ticket at. I find it more likely the agents you encountered at the first airport either didn't know how to change the departure city (which is easy to do) or just didn't want to take the time to sell a ticket. I would report this experience to Frontier so they can reinforce proper procedures to their ground handler at this airport if this is a common issue. Your experience at the second airport is more typical and affirms that nothing has changed, at least in my view.
I've never had an issue purchasing a ticket at an airport to depart from any city Frontier serves (as recently as October 6). If this restriction were true, it would be impossible to book multi-city itineraries or even a one-way ticket to arrive at the airport you are purchasing the ticket at. I find it more likely the agents you encountered at the first airport either didn't know how to change the departure city (which is easy to do) or just didn't want to take the time to sell a ticket. I would report this experience to Frontier so they can reinforce proper procedures to their ground handler at this airport if this is a common issue. Your experience at the second airport is more typical and affirms that nothing has changed, at least in my view.
I would not pass by BDL in the next few months, if nothing new comes up but if I experience the same issue again, I would report the experience to Frontier as you have mentioned.
#71

Join Date: Jan 2017
Posts: 42
I was at one of the local airports in my metro area picking up tickets last night when one of the F9 ticketing agents mentioned that corporate is trying to get their agents to charge the $25 "Agent Assistance Fee" for tickets booked at the airport. I know the other area airport tried to pull a fast one on my trying to tack on this charge for a booking I was making there recently. Has anyone else been hearing about this / experiencing this?
This would likely seem to run afoul of Federal Excise Tax regulations regarding the CIC and could open the airline up to a class action suit, DOT/IRS investigation, and/or other punitive actions...
This would likely seem to run afoul of Federal Excise Tax regulations regarding the CIC and could open the airline up to a class action suit, DOT/IRS investigation, and/or other punitive actions...
#72


Join Date: Mar 2009
Programs: AA Gold, Bonvoy Gold, Hilton Honors Gold
Posts: 51
I drove to ORD today as I was about to buy 5 tickets (one-way) and it would have potentially saved me $115. Since Frontier has pared down schedule from ORD, the counter is open only for a few hours everyday. When I reached the counter, there was nobody in the line and the next flight out was almost 2 hours away. But the lady at the counter said that their system is "acting up" all-day and she cannot do any ticketing, and asked me to book online. That sounded like a rehearsed answer & it smelled like BS. I politely asked if she can give it a try and if it doesn't go through, no harm done. She said doesn't want to touch the system is it is "acting up" and it might affect her to check-in and asked me to try again tomorrow!
I asked her if I booked tickets at airport will she charge me extra, just wanted to get an idea if it is worth coming back again. She said if the "system adds $25 for assistance" they are asked not to override it. Very shady!
I ended up booking online as frontier is still cheaper compared to other options.
I asked her if I booked tickets at airport will she charge me extra, just wanted to get an idea if it is worth coming back again. She said if the "system adds $25 for assistance" they are asked not to override it. Very shady!
I ended up booking online as frontier is still cheaper compared to other options.
#75


Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: TOL
Posts: 1,042

