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A flyer's nightmare or dream...OVERBOOKING!

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  • assghanistan
    replied
    if i ever flew anything but non-rev, i would sure as hell try and book myself in such a way as to always get free tickets. i know some people who have hardly ever paid for a ticket, yet still manage to become silver elites on continental. they just constantly book on oversold flights, then rebook with the given voucher on another oversold flight, etc.....

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  • FlyCharlestonSC
    replied
    I've only done it once.
    My sister has done it more times than I can count. She flies a lot.
    In fact, she is in Costa Rica at the moment on a free AA ticket!

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  • assghanistan
    replied
    yeah....that'd be nice to get comps for overbooked flights, huh, CAL99?.....
    one of these days, though.........

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  • cal99
    replied
    I would usually give up my seat, unless I have to be there that day and its the last flight. Oh course 99.99% of my travel is Non-rev, so when I hear them asking for volunteers, im usually busy trying to rebook

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  • thunderball'65
    replied
    I would especially would feel glad to give up my seat if it were the trip home from a vacation, because that obviously means that you would extend your vacation another day, and you get first class service. America West has done that to us a lot. The Carlsbad, CA-PHX Dash 8 is always overbooked we just fly out of SAN which is twenty minutes driving away and we get in only an hour later to wherever we go whether it be somthing as simple as Phoenix or as far as an East Coast destination. Plus we have earned like $1500 dollars in vouchers with them and plus our miles makes for a lot of free flights. Those are great for last minute trips.

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  • TangoSierraVictor
    replied
    A few times, on domestic Australia flights. both for overbooking i expect and also because of other reasons. It used to happen quite a bit if you were travelling as part of a family (eg with me, 4 people travelling)

    In April 1996 Ansett put my family and myself up to c on a 737 because it was a busy flight, with quite a few families travelling. It was the end of the Anzac Day holiday-weekend and many people travel down south for the time.

    January 1997: Ansett flight Brisbane-Melbourne. Overbooked 767, I was moved up to business on AN75 (peak hour flight). I was under 18 and on my own.

    January 1997: Ansett flight Melbourne-Sydney. The currency exchange at Sydney airport was robbed, and flights from SYD had been either cancelled or delayed. The a/c I (along with my family) was meant to travel on was in SYD, and so we were re-booked onto a flight that was scheduled to leave MEL about 5 minutes after we had finished checking in. My brother and I were put up to C but mum and dad were in Y.

    August 1997: Ansett flight AN123 TSV-BNE. Just moved up to business on a whim by the check-in (oh and it probably had something to do with the fact that I had told the res staff when making the booking that the trip was a birthday present from me to me- 18 years old ).

    It used to happen quite a bit when the classes were first, business and economy. Seating (on a 737) in first was 2+2, in biz it was 3+3 and in econ it was 3+3. The diff between biz and y was that the seats were velvety/velour, and had about 4 more inches legroom. The meals were better but basically the y food, but with more crockery, silver and polish. Even the full Y class fares were not too different from the C class ones: something like $350 one way compared with $450 one way TSV-BNE.
    First was about $530 one way (1996-7 levels).

    TangoSierraVictor

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  • ptbodale
    replied
    If you are a contingent (con) you get use to being bumped and nothing for it.

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  • FlyingPhotog
    replied
    Originally posted by fly1346
    how do u get bumped... what is the process do u ask to get bumped where do u ask please let me know. BTW did anyone ever get bumped on Jetblue
    If the flight is oversold they will ask for "bump" volunteers shortly before departure. They will list the compensation(s) vouchers, that you will get at that time.

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  • fly1346
    replied
    how do u get bumped... what is the process do u ask to get bumped where do u ask please let me know. BTW did anyone ever get bumped on Jetblue

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  • PHF2ATL
    replied
    We just got back last night from OGG and on the ATL-RIC segment, we got bumped for $200 on to the 6:42pm flight. This wasn't so bad because our original flight was delayed until 5:40 anyway(sched- 5:05) When we got to our new gate it was annouced that this flight had been overbooked also and they we offering $400 Delta Dollars, free dinner, free night's stay at the Sheraton and free breakfast the next morning and an 8am depature. I really wanted to do it but my mom said no and she really wanted to get home

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  • DougNYC
    replied
    Well, if you need to get somewhere at a certain date, obviously it's not going to do you much good.

    But if I wasn't in any particular hurry I'd certainly volunteer to get bumped, if the deal was good enough.

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  • flyingbosshog
    replied
    Overbooking can be a good thing if your plans are flexable

    A couple of years abo flying USAIRWAYS Philadelphia to London I took the 350 dollar voucher and got bumped up to first class on a British Airways 747! Talk about lucky!

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  • Aces320
    replied
    In colombia, travel agencies and airlines tend to overbook flights to the US, specially flights departing on thursdays and weekends, i was travelling a lan chile 767-300 in economy class, the miss in the counter told us that we could fly in Biz class for 80 bucks, or flying the Sunday in First Class.....we needed to be in Miami for Saturday, so sadly we paid the 80 bucks, and flew in Biz, one of my best flights ever.

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  • pilotgolfer
    replied
    me, my bro, and my dad were flying DL DFW-ATL in the summer of 2001. our original flight was on an L10 and it was overbooked by a few seats so we got bumped off. i didnt realize till 2002 that that was one of my last chances to fly on a DL L10. we got on a 732.

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  • matt1168
    replied
    It depends on the situation. If I'm going for leisure (escpecially if I'm going home), I'll give up a seat, why the hell not? If I'm at ACY and I decide to give up a seat on the flight, which I've only once did, I took the hotel room in a fancy hotel in the city, got a $50 travel voucher, and got to fly business class the next day (ACY-PBI, beginning 2003). Keep in mind; I only live 10 minutes or less from the airport.

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