[Travelandtourism] Q & A.

Reese reese at shilohstravel.com
Fri Aug 28 23:12:29 UTC 2009


Q. We had long-standing reservations for a flight to St Louis, connecting in 
Atlanta. Departure time from our home city was 8:30 am.

We received an email timed at midnight (which we didn't see right away) and 
then a 5:00 am automated phone call from Delta telling us the flights had 
been cancelled, and that we'd been placed on another series of flights 
departing around noon. It would have gotten us to St Louis within five hours 
of our original arrival time.

The new timing did not work for us, so I called Delta (and after being on 
hold for quite a while) the reissue desk allowed us to cancel with a full 
refund ... since they said that it was an involuntary change on our part.

Is this common? I mean, I'm grateful to have a full refund, but with all the 
schedule changes in the air today, is it Delta's policy to fully refund if 
THEY change the flights?



A. Yes indeed, this is called an involuntary refund and most airlines have a 
rule in their contracts of carriage covering this. If the flight is 
cancelled, or the time significantly changed (depending on airline, if it's 
just an hour or two this doesn't apply) you can get a full refund, even on a 
non refundable ticket.

You'll find this rule (usually called Rule 260) in the airlines' contracts 
of carriage. So if you feel like the new flight times are so far off the 
original that you can't make it to the airport in time, or your trip will be 
futile, ask for a refund.


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