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Getting the Best Air Fares
There is a wide variety of air fares
available to travelers. This fact sheet will help you
choose the one that's best for you.
Be flexible in your travel plans in order
to get the lowest fare. The best deals may be limited to
travel on certain days of the week (often Tuesday through
Thursday, or Friday night through Sunday morning) or
particular hours of the day (e.g., late-night
departures). This applies to each of your flights, not
just the first flight in your itinerary. After you get a
fare quote, ask the reservations agent if you could save
even more by flying a day earlier or later, or by taking
a different flight on the same day. Or simply ask the
agent what the lowest fare is, and what you need to do to
qualify for it.
Discount seats are usually
"blacked out" during holiday periods. However,
you might be able to get a discount fare if you fly on
the holiday itself (e.g., New Year's day).
Plan as far ahead as you can.
Most airlines set aside only a few seats on many
desirable flights at the lower rates. The real best
bargains often sell out very quickly. On the other hand,
if a particular flight is not selling as well as
expected, air carriers sometimes make more discount seats
available for a particular flight just before the
advance-purchase deadline expires. For example, if the
lowest fare has a 21-day advance-purchase requirement but
is sold out for most dates, and you can go any time, ask
about fare availability on flights 21 or 22 days from
when you call.
While planning ahead is a good
general rule, if you can bide your time you might
encounter a "fare sale." Many airlines put
seats on sale for brief periods several times a year
(although you usually can purchase tickets for flights
weeks or months after the end of the sale period). It is
difficult to predict when these sales will occur,
although they often fall during times when people are
less likely to buy airline tickets (e.g. early autumn or
right immediately after New Years).
In a large metropolitan area,
the fare could depend on which airport you use. For
example, if you are going to Southeast Florida and plan
to rent a car, it might not make much difference if you
fly to Miami or Ft. Lauderdale, except for ticket price.
Also, a connection (change of planes) or a one-stop
flight is sometimes cheaper than a nonstop. Always check
on alternate airports and routings when pricing a ticket.
Look into all airlines that
serve the market you are interested in, including
low-cost carriers that offer low fares. Many times the
major carriers will match the fares of a low-cost airline
between the same cities; but often this will only be for
a certain limited number of seats on each flight. On a
low-cost carrier, find out what you get for your money:
baggage transfers from one carrier to another, meals,
advance seat assignments, etc. Note that small airlines
sometimes have only one flight per day in many markets,
and they frequently will not reroute you on another
airline if your flight is canceled or delayed. In such
cases you may have to wait until the next day to fly.
Ask about all restrictions on
your fare. Typical requirements for discount fares
include purchasing a round-trip ticket, buying the ticket
a certain number of days before departure (e.g., for many
fares, at least 14 or 21 days before you leave),
purchasing the ticket within 24 hours of making a
reservation, staying over a Saturday night, traveling
during a certain time of the year, staying no more than
30 days, and, as discussed below, refund/change
restrictions.
Ask about your ability to change
or cancel your flight if you need to. Even if you get
sick, you cannot assume you will get a refund. In fact,
most discount tickets now are non-refundable, but can be
applied toward the purchase of other tickets on the same
carrier. You must usually pay an administrative charge
and any difference between the fares for the old and new
flights when you do this.
Consider using a travel agent.
Agents usually do not charge a fee (they get a commission
from the airline), and they can tell you about
"consolidators" and other sources of discounted
seats that are not available directly from the airline.
However, consolidator seats can have even more severe
restrictions than the airlines' own deep-discount fares,
particularly if the flight is delayed or canceled. A few
travel agents sometimes have access to special deals with
a particular airline (either discounts or extra
services). If you are flying to a popular foreign
destination, or to Las Vegas or Hawaii, ask the travel
agent about Public Charters. These charters sometimes
offer lower fares, but again with significant
restrictions that are spelled out in an
operator/participant contract that you should review
carefully.
Ask the travel agent if the city
where you live or the city where you are going is an
airline "hub." If it is, fares may be higher
than for flights to other nearby cities because of
reduced competition. Someone who lives at a hub might
save money by leaving from another nearby city, even if
they end up connecting through the hub to get to their
destination.
A number of airlines send e-mail
messages every week to receive notification of
last-minute fare specials for departures within the next
few days. See the airlines' World Wide Web sites for
information about these programs, or call their
reservations line. For a list of airline web sites, go to
http://www.airlines.com
(Do not assume that an airline reservation
agent or travel agent will be aware of the fares offered
to e-mail subscribers.)
Many airlines offer a seniors
discount off any fare to travelers over a certain age. In
addition, some carriers offer bereavement and emergency
illness fares with varying documentation requirements and
discounts.
If you are a member of an
airline's frequent-flyer program and you are considering
buying a promotional or deep-discount fare, ask if that
fare will earn frequent-flyer miles.
After you buy your ticket, you
may wish to call the airline or travel agent once or
twice before departure to confirm your reservations and
check the fare. Fares change all the time, and if that
same fare goes down before you fly, some airlines will
refund the difference. But you have to ask.
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