I found a flight that has a connection in Japan that’s cheaper than a direct flight to Japan. Is it legal to take that cheaper flight and leave the airport at the layover location as our final destination? Will they prevent us from taking the return flight?

  • my_hat_stinks
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    1 year ago

    It’s not illegal to pay for a service you don’t use or only partly use, provided the service itself isn’t illegal. It’s not unethical either; you paid the full price requested by the airline.

    The airline may cancel your return ticket and blacklist you, leaving you stranded. Definitely unethical, but since it’s legal corporations aren’t too worried about that part.

  • bridge_too_close
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    251 year ago

    It’s not illegal, but the airline could cancel your return ticket and/or blacklist you.

  • @Alexstarfire
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    141 year ago

    It’s not illegal but there are plenty of problems you can run into and caveats. You can’t check bags since they always go to the final destination. If you get round trip tickets they may cancel your return flight. If you purchase them separately there’s less risk. They could ban you from future flights. Probably a couple things I’m missing.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Are you breaking criminal law? No. So it’s not criminally illegal

    Are you breaking a civil law contract? Probably not.

    Is the company who sold you the original ticket obligated to do more business with you going forward after you skip a leg? No they’re not obligated to continue doing business with you

    Is it morally unethical? No. The plane is flying regardless.

    Basically it’s up to you, how much administrative hassle you’re willing to put up with

    In your scenario, you bought a round trip ticket, the airline is unlikely to honor the return on that round trip ticket from the middle airport. They probably have requirements like you have to be at the beginning leg of a flight to have the ongoing legs. In all likelihood they’ll cancel the return side of your ticket if you miss an outgoing leg. Why would you need the return, if you never made it to your destination?

    If you’re going to do skip legged travel, it should be one way flights. You still could get back listed by the airline but it’s unlikely. You could just say you had a medical emergency, family emergency, you overslept, got drunk at the airport, life happens. And they can’t prove it one way or the other especially if it’s a one-way flight

  • @z00s
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    61 year ago

    Do it. You owe nothing to corporations.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I remember looking this up some time ago, and I read that doing so may violate the terms you agreed to when purchasing the ticket. They will probably fine you, or at least attempt to, if you don’t pull it off.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      Fine you? Can you point to any airline that fines you for missing a flight? I’m genuinely curious.

      People miss flights all the time, and usually the worst that happens is they lose their ticket. Or they get rebooked at lower priority. But an external fine? That’s going to be unique

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Yea, even with connecting flights I’m sure people miss the connection for various reasons with reasonable regularity