Airlines in the United States are now required to give passengers cash refunds if their flight is significantly delayed or canceled, even if that person does not explicitly ask for a refund.

The Department of Transportation says the final federal rule requiring that airlines dole out refunds - not vouchers - went into effect Monday. The major change is being implemented only a month before the start of what is likely to be a huge holiday travel season.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg made the announcement on X after he first presented the proposed rule back in April. “Today, our automatic refund rule goes into full effect,” Buttigieg posted. “Passengers deserve to get their money back when an airline owes them-without headaches or haggling.”

  • @bitjunkie
    link
    1814 hours ago

    They charge at current rate, why don’t they refund at it?

    • @PlantDadManGuy
      link
      313 hours ago

      I guess the “current rate” for a canceled flight ticket would be $0…

      • partial_accumen
        link
        213 hours ago

        I think @[email protected] is essentially referring to the cost of a replacement flight purchase the same day. The obvious answer is that action isn’t required by law and would be massively more expensive for airlines. Rates for regular fares would have to skyrocket to cover the costs, which would create a vicious circle.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          210 hours ago

          Rates for regular fares would have to skyrocket to cover the costs

          Why is that exactly? Does the airline face additional expenses when you book a flight the same day versus a month in advance?

          • partial_accumen
            link
            28 hours ago

            The opposite. They can lose money when you book far in advance. They need the expensive close bookings (usually business travelers) to make the most of their money. So if the airlines are force to give away expensive profitable seats (expensive because they are in high demand), they’ll have to raise the rates on other earlier bookings to make up the difference.