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A Bogus Bereavement
Fare
The Travel Troubleshooter ·
December 2, 2004
Q: My sister
died unexpectedly last summer and I had to fly to Pittsburgh for the funeral.
I called several airlines to request a bereavement fare, but the best
they could do was $625 roundtrip, which didn't seem like a good price.
Then I found what I thought was a last-minute fare of $313 on Travelocity
through Travelzoo. I bought it.
But half an hour later, I received an e-mail from Travelocity saying that
I wasn't eligible for the ticket and that I should call the online agency.
I phoned back and was told that my ticket required a 14-day advance purchase.
If I wanted to fly tomorrow, I was told the fare would be $369. I reluctantly
agreed.
It took about 15 minutes for the reservations agent to get all of my information.
And wouldn't you know it, by the time he had finished the fare had jumped
to $465.
I had no choice but to book the seat. But by the time I had returned from
the funeral, the price had gone up to $575, because I had to make a change
on the ticket, which cost me another $100.
I stopped by the airline ticket counter on my way home and asked about
bereavement fares. An agent told me they don't really offer them anymore
because so many people ask for them who aren't entitled to them. I wrote
to Travelocity twice, but received two form letters.
What's the lowdown on bereavement fares? And can you get Travelocity to
send me anything but a form response?
-- Hank Greenberg
A: Bereavement fares are mostly bogus. Technically, they're discounted
walk-up fares that are meant to lessen the financial burden to someone
like you who has to attend a funeral.
But your ordeal - and the maddeningly fluctuating prices you encountered
when you tried to buy through Travelocity - show that the system often
doesn't work.
Bereavement fares are ineffective because the fare structure of the major
airlines, which tries to charge last-minute travelers the most money,
is obsolete. Even the way in which airline tickets are priced (they use
sophisticated computers to change prices literally by the minute) is as
outdated as a biplane.
The major airlines know their system needs to change, and from what I've
heard they're working on simplifying their fare structures.
That's the good news.
The bad news is that
what you encountered with the Travelzoo referral to Travelocity could
easily repeat itself. Airlines and online travel agencies pay Travelzoo
to publish its specials, but as they appear on the site, the bargains
are long on promises but short on details.
You have to click through to the deal to find out about the fine print.
And evidently, when you followed the link to the Travelocity fare, you
didn't have a chance to review all the details.
But that doesn't explain why you would still get an initial price of $313
from Travelocity. If you had input your dates correctly, it should have
given you the correct price for a last-minute ticket. Something doesn't
add up.
A Travelocity representative agreed that you were under the mistaken impression
that you were entitled to the $313 fare, but insisted that at every step
of the way, you had consented to the higher fare.
"We will not offer him any compensation due to the fact that he agreed
to the fare prior to booking," she told me.
Does that mean you're out of luck? No. Although you agreed to the fare,
that doesn't necessarily mean you also had a positive customer-service
experience. Travelocity acknowledged your frustration by sending you a
$150 voucher, which nearly covers the fare difference.
Christopher Elliott
is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler. Do you have a trip
that needs fixing? E-mail him or
call him directly at (407) 699-9529. Your question may be published
in a future story. The Travel Troubleshooter
appears weekly on this site.
Get a look behind the scenes at The Travel Troubleshooter. Check
out Elliott's Travel Notes blog.
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