15 Ocak 2011 Cumartesi

American Airlines Levies a Standby Fee

Leaving on an earlier flight now carries a cost on the country's second-largest airline

Another formerly free airline service will soon require payment of a hefty charge on one more carrier -- this time, the second-largest in the land. Starting with tickets bought from February 22, American Airlines will charge $50 to passengers standing by for an earlier flight. The exceptions, of course, are elite members of the AAdvantage program, first, business and full-fare coach class passengers and military personnel, who still can fly standby without a charge. In a great example of airline newspeak, American claimed that it wasn't about the money but to improve the the boarding process by reducing crowd of hopeful standbys around the podiums. Yeah, right!

But wait! There's more! American recently announced that after May 1, it would begin charging non-elite passengers $8 for the use of a blanket and pillow on domestic , Hawaii and Western Hemisphere flights. Cynic that I am, I wonder whether they'll begin cranking up the air conditioning (or heating the cabin less) so that more passengers will be chilly enough to be willing to fork over 8 bucks for the privilege of being comfortable in the air. In the first and business cabins, and on overseas routes, blankets and pillows will still be free.

Other carriers also charge standbys. The fine print varies, but airlines charging for non-elite-level standbys include Continental ($25-$50) and Delta ($50); United surprisingly allows passengers to stand by free but charges $75 for specific seat requests. At Southwest, some passengers may pay a fare differential fee. While American is not the only carrier sock standbys with this additional fee, but two add-on charges announced in less than a month really underscores how deceptive low fares can be by the time you finish paying all the add-ons.

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