| Airfare
Types & Rules
Airlines give better fares to people
who advance book because they are trying to encourage people to book as
early as possible. If the airline were to lower fares just before flight
time there would be a flood of people (on random flights) at the last
minute. Airlines need an accurate estimate of the number of people and
amount of baggage on a flight so that they can load the proper amount of
fuel. (Meals and beverages also have to be loaded.)
Moreover, people who book
at the last minute are usually flying on business, and therefore the
business is paying for it. People flying for pleasure usually know weeks
or months in advance, and can't afford the prices that a business would
pay. Thus it is to an airline's advantage to set rates according to the
major differences between business and leisure travelers:
- Business travelers fly mostly between 9 and 5,
whereas leisure travelers can fly offpeak hours.
- Business travelers buy tickets on very short
notice, whereas leisure travelers plan trips well in advance.
- Business travelers do not stay over a weekend (= Saturday night),
whereas leisure travelers do.
So airlines typically give discounts for people
who stay over a weekend, flying offpeak hours, and purchasing tickets 7
days, 14 days, 21 days or 30 days in advance. Such fares are known as
excursion, discount, or supersaver fares. |









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For example, US domestic excursion fares require
that you buy your roundtrip ticket 7 days, 14 days, or 30 days in advance,
and that you stay over a weekend (usually Saturday night, though sometimes
Sunday night as well). Some may also restrict the travel to a 30-day
maximum stay. Stopovers aren't allowed, except for the purpose of
connection (if you want a stopover, you'll have to pay extra). Some fares
may be limited to a particular routing (e.g., routes with connections cost
less than nonstop flights). You may also be limited to flying during
offpeak hours, with flights during the busiest times of the day costing
more. Tickets are usually non-refundable and non-transferable, and may
either be non-changeable or have a $35 change fee. The price is usually
the average of the two one-way tickets. (E.g., a 2-week advance PGH/BOS
advance ticket is around $200 this way.) Tickets must be purchased within
24 hours of the reservation. For international excursion fares, also known as
apex fares, you must book at least 21 days in advance of the flight, and
you may have to purchase the tickets at the time of the reservation.
Minimum stay is usually 7-10 days, and maximum stay can range from 3
months to a year. Midweek travel (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday)
is usually cheaper. Tickets are non-refundable and non-transferable. Fares
often depend on the seasons.
Since a regular 1-way ticket is so much worse
than a round-trip excursion fare, it sometimes pays to buy a round-trip
ticket and throw away the other half (if you're only going one way). If
you buy a round trip ticket and throw away the other half, make the first
leg of the trip the destination, since some airlines will cancel the
return trip if you don't show up for the first leg. If you intend to skip
ONE leg of a multi-leg flight, tell this to your reservation agent in
advance, so that they can annotated your PNR to prevent subsequent legs
from being cancelled. (Note: You can't use this technique to exploit a
"hidden city" fare. You'll have to have a very good reason for
skipping a leg for the travel agent to allow it, and you may have to pay a
different fare to do so.)
For example, a round-trip to San Francisco from
Pittsburgh with a one-night stayover is $1,333. However, the cost of a
Saturday night stayover is only $479 if you order the ticket a week or two
in advance. Purchasing two round trip tickets, one originating from Pgh
and one from SF, and then using one half of each round trip ticket saves
you $375.
Note that for many airlines the discount fares
depend solely on the date of the first leg of the trip. The price does not
vary no matter when the return flight is (so long as you stay over a
Saturday night). You could buy a flight with one leg in March and the
return in November, and it would cost the same as if the return was in
March. For some of the lowest fares, however, there is now a 30-day
maximum stay. Staying more than 30 days often increases the fare by about
25%.
If you travel on offpeak hours and low volume
days, the rates are cheaper. Thus to guarrantee a low cost flight, you
have to be very flexible about where you are going, what time and day you
are leaving, and how long you want to stay. Offpeak hours typically
include before 7am, between 10am and 2pm, and after 7pm, depending on the
day of the week.
Also important is when you make the reservation.
If you make the reservation for an offpeak flight during the peak season
(say, make a reservation for February just before Thanksgiving), you may
be charged the peak rates. After the holidays some airlines lower their
discount fares to attract customers. So you may be able to get a better
fare by making your reservation right after the holidays.
If you notice that the fare for your flight has
been lowered after you bought the ticket, try calling the airline.
Sometimes they will refund the difference between the price you paid and
the lower fare. (You may have to go to the airport to get the ticket
rewritten at the lower fare.) You may have to pay a $35 to $50 reticketing
fee to get the refund, but some airlines have been known to waive the fee
if you get the money back in the form of a voucher (to be applied to
future travel) instead of cash. For example, USAir will refund the
difference less a service charge, or give a travel voucher (credit) for
the difference with no service charge.
According to a Wall Street Journal article by
James S. Hirsch, (July 30, 1993) many airlines now test fare increases by
raising prices on the weekend (Friday night through Sunday night). If
other airlines don't match the increases, the fares return to normal on
Monday. So you should be careful when purchasing tickets on the weekend.
(This works around the Justice Department consent decree that prevents
airlines from signalling proposed fare increases in the computer
reservation systems. When the competitors didn't match the increase, the
airlines would cancel the increase before it took effect. With the new
method, since it affects current prices, it technically isn't
price-fixing.)
Hirsch also reported that many airlines have
increased the $25 charge for changing advanced purchase tickets to $30 or
$35. Note that this is often a minimum fee -- you'll probably have to pay
the full difference in price if the new ticket price is much higher.
Airlines are using these measures to discourage passengers from buying
tickets during a fare war and later changing the time of flight or
destination. If you go to one of the airline's ticket agents (not a travel
agent), some airlines will reissue a ticket at the lower fare without fee
if the difference is refunded in the form of a voucher for future
travel.
In addition to the Saturday night stay
requirement, many airlines now give additional discounts for travel
midweek (usually Tuesday and Wednesday, sometimes Thursday) when a
Saturday night stay is involved. Some also provide discounts for travel on
Saturdays. Flights usually aren't fully booked on these days. For example,
Northwest discount coupons recently had this restriction. Most leisure
travelers like to travel Sunday-Sunday, or at least not miss a large part
of the week. Business travelers, of course, don't like to stay over the
weekend.
When making your reservation through an airline
ticket agent or through a travel agent, always ask for the lowest possible
fare. Don't just give them specific dates/times and ask them for a low
fare -- tell them that your plans are flexible, and you'd like to know
what the low fare is. If you're too specific on the flight details, and
don't say that you're looking for the cheapest possible fare, you might
not get the best price. Sometimes by departing on a different day, you can
get a much cheaper fare.
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