Members unicorn Posted 18 hours ago Members Posted 18 hours ago I've been tracking the airfares for an upcoming trip we're going to take to Vienna/Danube cruise in May, and was shocked to see the business class fare increase from $7000 per person to $16,300 per person! I called American Airlines and found out that, in addition to those changes, one can no longer upgrade with miles or systemwide upgrade certificates, but rather, one has to buy the ticket first, then get presented with $$ or miles offers to upgrade. I checked those offers on upcoming LAX to MIA flight, and they were sky-high in price for either miles or $$ (160,000 miles per couple just for the way over, and over 200,000 miles for the way back!!). As far as I can tell, it looks as though Delta Airlines has taken the same strategy, since they're asking over $14,000 per person for to LAX-VIE roundtrip business class fare. Fortunately, the price for a United business class seat on a code-share on Austrian Airlines is less than half that, so we're going along with that before United joins the band-wagon. I hate to dump American (especially due to bad experiences I've had on United), but these policy changes seem too expensive to swallow. This is a copy of a complain letter I wrote to AA: "I'm a Million Miler and long-time Executive Platinum member, but am shocked by the stratospheric increase in prices of business class seats and the difficult in getting upgrades. We are taking a trip from LAX to VIE (Vienna) in May, and were shocked to see the price of the business class ticket go from $7000 to over $16,000 per person. What's worse is that one can no longer use Systemwide Upgrades or miles until after one has purchased one's tickets, and then get surprised by an "offer" to upgrade. We looked at our offer for our upcoming trip to Miami, and it was off the charts! United is offering a nonstop LAX to VIE for $6861 per person. I'm afraid we had to take them up on that offer. After all of these years of loyalty to AA, I hate to break the relationship, but I'm not going to spend an extra $20,000 for the sake of loyalty, when that loyalty isn't rewarded. I have a suspicion that AA will lose its most loyal customers if these changes continue." Quote
floridarob Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago A/A doesn't care..... really, they just don't care. United is the best of the worse for US carriers....not that they're perfect, but when then mess up, they generally do the right thing to make up for it, sometimes with a little arm twisting, but they do. unicorn and ToTheCore 1 1 Quote
Members Riobard Posted 16 hours ago Members Posted 16 hours ago Air Canada LAX to VIE in May thru Toronto is an outrageous $14,900USD long-haul with one of the Europe legs code-share Austrian. Looks like you got a good deal with United code-share Austrian considering all three are Star Alliance and you have the luxury of non-stop. Quote
PeterRS Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Many airlines abandoned loyalty decades ago. At the start of the 1990s, Cathay Pacific, my home airline in those days, offered lifetime Marco Polo Club membership with access to first class lounges whichever class being flown to those who reached 2 million miles within the decade. As a constant traveller, getting the miles was not very difficult. By mid-1998 I was up to around 1.7 million miles and confident I would reach that 2 million miles mark. Then in early 1999 CX cancelled the scheme with no perks even for those who had almost reached 2 million. That was when I switched my airline loyalty scheme for more than a dozen years. As for the horrendous price hikes mentioned by @unicorn, I fear more airlines will jump on the same bandwagon. As the seats in business class are upgraded virtually to individual suites, so the total humber of seats in that cabin decline. And since it is the seats in the front of the plane that make a route profitable, the cheaper business class seats that many have got used to will disappear from many of the airlines. Another reason for price hikes is less popular routes. I have no idea how popular or otherwise LAX to VIE might be, but I suspect not especially popular. Although a one-stop flight is boring, I wonder if LAX to MUC might be a good deal cheaper. If so, a second MUC to VIE flight might make the trip cheaper. On the other hand, I thoroughly recommend picking up a car and driving to Vienna, perhaps with an overnight stop en route. It is a beautiful drive. Quote
paulsf Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago You have to be carefull and patient with AA pricing. The high prices will usually drop a few days later. It’s like a computer glitch. i was booking a Miami-Bangkok for next month. AA web site kept coming up with $8k to 12k. I just kept checking each day and finally got a fare of $4800. I’ve run into this many times over the years. I’ve got to much invested in AA to change, but it can be challenging at times. The Lax-Mia flights are high because the Hollywood crowd commutes back and forth. They’ll’ pay anything. Quote
floridarob Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 12 minutes ago, paulsf said: I’ve got to much invested in AA to change, but it can be challenging at times. I knew this topic would get your attention, lol How many millions of actual miles have you flown with them again...?? Quote