Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
This right here. They oversold my last work flight. They needed 7 people to deplane and only got 4 in the end (enough for 1 family to board but not sit together).
Flying right now is basically just absolute BS and lawlessness.
I saw an IG story from a young woman on a flight from London. They boarded at like 2 pm and sat on the tarmac for over 5 hours. Some of the flight crew timed out but agreed to continue through (pilots were still good to go). The flight was supposed to go to Seattle but ended up with an alternate destination of JFK. Luckily, everyone was given hotel rooms and food voucher. They they took a flight the next day from JFK to SEA.
I had a United flight from Heathrow several weeks ago sit on the tarmac for close to 4 hours because of some mechanical issue. No one could get off. It was insane. Flying is an absolute crapshoot these days.
What is going on with their maintenance??? I was taking United from Dulles TO Paris a few weeks ago, and the same thing happened (we sat on the tarmac in the US, for 4 hours, with multiple mechanical issues). Hope an accident is not in the offing....
Anonymous wrote:Better to pay a little extra and get your seat assignments in hand.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting to see the "I'm not paying extra in advance for seats" crowd here, which heavily overlaps (I assume) with the "I showed up to this flight and demand to sit next to my 4 companions and everyone must move to accommodate me" crowd.
+1. This happened on our flight 2 hapless souls couldn’t get out of DCAAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
This is the problem. If a plane is oversold, the people without seat assignments are the first to be bumped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
This right here. They oversold my last work flight. They needed 7 people to deplane and only got 4 in the end (enough for 1 family to board but not sit together).
Flying right now is basically just absolute BS and lawlessness.
I saw an IG story from a young woman on a flight from London. They boarded at like 2 pm and sat on the tarmac for over 5 hours. Some of the flight crew timed out but agreed to continue through (pilots were still good to go). The flight was supposed to go to Seattle but ended up with an alternate destination of JFK. Luckily, everyone was given hotel rooms and food voucher. They they took a flight the next day from JFK to SEA.
I had a United flight from Heathrow several weeks ago sit on the tarmac for close to 4 hours because of some mechanical issue. No one could get off. It was insane. Flying is an absolute crapshoot these days.
If they can claim a mechanical issue then they don't pay anything. We got bumped because they allegedly had to "use a different plane" and it had two fewer seats. Of course there was no mention of when that substitution was made or actual proof. No solicitation for volunteers or offer for payment.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
This is the problem. If a plane is oversold, the people without seat assignments are the first to be bumped.
If you have a ticket they aren't allowed to just bump you off the flight. They have to pay people to get off voluntarily. They keep raising the payout until enough people volunteer to get off. There was a story in the news the other day where Delta had to pay either $5,000 or $10,000 per person to get people to volunteer on a flight out of MN.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
If they can claim a mechanical issue then they don't pay anything. We got bumped because they allegedly had to "use a different plane" and it had two fewer seats. Of course there was no mention of when that substitution was made or actual proof.
This is the problem. If a plane is oversold, the people without seat assignments are the first to be bumped.
If you have a ticket they aren't allowed to just bump you off the flight. They have to pay people to get off voluntarily. They keep raising the payout until enough people volunteer to get off. There was a story in the news the other day where Delta had to pay either $5,000 or $10,000 per person to get people to volunteer on a flight out of MN.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
This right here. They oversold my last work flight. They needed 7 people to deplane and only got 4 in the end (enough for 1 family to board but not sit together).
Flying right now is basically just absolute BS and lawlessness.
I saw an IG story from a young woman on a flight from London. They boarded at like 2 pm and sat on the tarmac for over 5 hours. Some of the flight crew timed out but agreed to continue through (pilots were still good to go). The flight was supposed to go to Seattle but ended up with an alternate destination of JFK. Luckily, everyone was given hotel rooms and food voucher. They they took a flight the next day from JFK to SEA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
This is the problem. If a plane is oversold, the people without seat assignments are the first to be bumped.
If you have a ticket they aren't allowed to just bump you off the flight. They have to pay people to get off voluntarily. They keep raising the payout until enough people volunteer to get off. There was a story in the news the other day where Delta had to pay either $5,000 or $10,000 per person to get people to volunteer on a flight out of MN.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You may have to choose a seat that has a premium charge assigned to it - anywhere from $25-$100 more. There is a color key when picking seats that tells you if there is a charge for the available seats. It may be that all of the “free” economy seats are taken (or are all in the middle row between other seats so not together).
No. They will give OP those seats for free the day of the flight. OP, don't be fooled into paying even more for them.
Our recent flights were fully booked (or oversold). I would not count in sitting anywhere desirable if you wait.
This is the problem. If a plane is oversold, the people without seat assignments are the first to be bumped.