How does this work?

LVSteve

Member
Joined
Feb 21, 2005
Messages
23,090
Reaction score
35,025
Location
Lost Wages, NV
Checking some flights for a trip. I look on google and come up with flights and prices. I select the round trip options that work for us and get a total number. I then go to the airline's own website and go to book that flight, and the price is over $100 more. HUH???:confused::confused::confused: Color me majorly baffled. Both prices allegedly include all the relevant taxes and fees.

My only guess is that it has something to do with the airline being foreign. Yes, I can see the hands being thrown up in horror, but they are the only carrier that provides a direct flight.
 
Register to hide this ad
Probably for the same reason they charge for paper tickets, carry-ons, checked baggage, etc.: they can make money. It's likely cheaper for them to let a middleman handle the data, so they're charging you for the "privilege" of dealing directly with them.
 
Last edited:
Checking some flights for a trip. I look on google and come up with flights and prices. I select the round trip options that work for us and get a total number. I then go to the airline's own website and go to book that flight, and the price is over $100 more. HUH???:confused::confused::confused: Color me majorly baffled. Both prices allegedly include all the relevant taxes and fees.

My only guess is that it has something to do with the airline being foreign. Yes, I can see the hands being thrown up in horror, but they are the only carrier that provides a direct flight.

From what understand, places like Trivago, booking.com, etc get a certain amount of slots at X wholesale or jobber price to sell for all participating airlines, hotels, rental cars, etc..The Airline or entity itself sells some as well at their retail price. The prices can vary wildly. I would always check an aggregate site like booking.com, etc before I bought directly through the airline/hotel, etc.
 
Middleman vendors, as posted above.

Those sites aren't run by the airlines and if you Google, other than the airline, you get the prices from the cheapest available.

I usually just go with the sure thing and get my tickets from the airlines. I may lose a little money, I may not, but at least I know I am dealing with the people that own the plane.

Good luck and have a safe trip.
 
OK, now it's gone from strange to WTH. I clicked through the google flights link and it took me to the airline's website at the lower price!!!! I've gone from baffled to totally stumped.

My only thought is that there is something to do with processing fees that is different. Maybe if you access the foreign airline directly, there is some higher charge that you don't get when going through the Web in the US. Flimsy, I know, but the best I can do.
 
When I am buying flights if I find a decent price I buy them then and there. I have priced tickets closed the browser, gone right back in and gotten a different price. The day of the week will make a difference also.

I agree with gmarshall99 completely, I don't buy tickets from anyone but the airline directly. If there are any issues it will be much easier to straighten things out without a middleman. I know my employer was flying to Florida a few years ago, bought tickets from a third party, flight got cancelled, third party refunded money and left him at the airport to find his own way.
 
I think I have solved the mystery. The price quoted is for the airline's "travel light" scheme, one personal item only, NOT a carry on bag. That's not going to work for a five day visit.
 
Back
Top