ajs@hpfcla.UUCP (11/08/85)
How do you get a fair refund from an airline company for a lost ticket? My wife recently "lost" her ticket before the last leg of a triangle (on Piedmont, if it matters). She had to buy another ticket for $200 more (!) than that leg originally cost. She already filled out a lost ticket refund request. I know it will take as much as six months to get the refund. She's since found the "lost" (unused) ticket. The question is: Do we have any leverage on the airline to get the more expensive ticket refunded, rather than the cheaper one? I didn't think so... but I had to ask anyway. :-) Thanks in advance, Alan "kissing $200 goodbye" Silverstein, {ihnp4 | hplabs}!hpfcla!ajs
ajs@hpfcla.UUCP (11/11/85)
Re: airline ticket refund The Net comes through again -- it didn't take long to get a competent reply by mail (thanks!). For your interest I'll excerpt the key points, and leave off the author's name as I haven't gotten permission to post the whole letter. Alan Silverstein ...it has been my experience that the airline refunds the cost of the new and more expensive ticket purchased minus their "lost ticket fee" which usually runs in the vicinity of about $25.00. If you bought the ticket through a travel agent it is part of their service to help you, and if you got it direct from the airlines the people on the res line should also be able to answer any questions. Since you found the ticket, you should report that immediately to the airline. It not only may speed up your refund, but it possibly might even save you some money. (they might choose to forgive the fee). ...I have never seen the airlines to not refund a lost or stolen ticket. It has taken anywhere from a few weeks to almost a year but averages under 3 months. The 6 month warning is usually a CYA by the airline. ...you should always buy airline tickets with a credit card. When a ticket is refunded it goes back to the form of payment which paid for it. Therefore if you have a ticket stolen the crook can only refund it back to your credit card, use it, or have it rewritten. In the latter two cases they are frequently afraid because they do not know the extent of the computer power in notifying the airline agent about the stolen ticket so they usually deep-six the ticket.