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Why you should have the free MyFlights app on your iPhone

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Long-term Head for Points readers will know that I am a big fan of the free MyFlights app for iPhone.  It is one of those services that doesn’t really prove its value until something happens to one of your future flights, at which point you realise how indispensible it is.

Here is an example from a couple of years ago.

One Wednesday afternoon, I got a notification from the MyFlights app on my iPhone.  My British Airways flight back from Dubai to London in a couple of months time had been switched from a new Boeing 787-9 to a Boeing 777.  This meant that the aircraft would have no First Class cabin and my son and I had been downgraded to Club World.

The notification was so quick that, when I looked at the separate booking for my wife and daughter, BA had not yet got around to changing it.  Another hour and it would probably have been done.

I got on the telephone to BA and was able to move the four of us onto a later departure.  This still had four First Class seats left for sale (it wasn’t showing any Avios seats but BA still moved us regardless) and was at a more convenient time.

This quick notice was vital.  The First cabin on the later service was almost full and if there were any other passengers booked in First on my original flight, there may have been no seats left when BA got around to officially notifying them.

This is why MyFlights – which is a free app – is well worth downloading.  Annoyingly it is only available for iOS, not Android, but it is also available as a desktop programme.

(Disclaimer – I have known Chris, who codes MyFlights, for many years.  It is worth noting that The Sunday Times put MyFlights in its list of the top 500 apps in 2011 and 2012, should you be worried that my review is biased by my connection to the author!)

The MyFlights website is here.

MyFlights thumbnail

How MyFlights works

You input the booking references for your upcoming flights and MyFlights stores them all for you.  This makes it easy to pull up details of forthcoming trips.

That is the boring bit though.

This is the clever bit – MyFlights is the only flight app to regularly interrogates Amadeus, the largest flight booking database.  As soon as any changes are made to your booking, you receive a push notification to your iPhone or iPad and / or an e-mail.

My Flights

Let’s imagine that you are booked to fly on a British Airways 747 in Club World.  British Airways decides at some point to switch the flight to a Boeing 777 instead.  You would lose your existing seat reservation and BA would allocate you something else based on the new configuration.  British Airways would usually not tell you about this if it did not involve a cabin downgrade or a change of departure time.

With MyFlights, you would get a notification within a few hours of the change being made.  You would be able to select your choice of new seat before other passengers had noticed.  (The screenshot above is an example of what MyFlights shows when your seat is changed.  If the aircraft model was changed, this would also be highlighted.)

Similarly, airlines do not always notify passengers promptly if their flight has a minor time change.  Even if you would have been told, MyFlights will notify you days before BA gets around it and you will be first in the queue at the call centre to make changes.

The only downside to MyFlights is that it only works for airlines who use Amadeus.  This includes most major full service carriers although not all – Virgin and Emirates are excluded, for example, as they use Sabre.

What you can do in such scenarios is manually input the details of your flight.  Alternatively, if you use TripIt you can sync your account with My Flights and it will pick up your reservations from there.  Whilst you will not be notified of any changes, it does mean that your upcoming flights list in MyFlights is comprehensive.  MyFlights can also import your past flights from TripIt so you have a record of your previous travel.

You can also access your MyFlights data via their website should your iPhone run out of juice at any point!

New paid options for 2017

After running MyFlights as a side venture for seven years with zero revenue, Chris is now trying to commercialise it and roll it out on a wider basis.

The free version of MyFlights remains free with bookings monitored every 48 hours.  There are now two paid plans available on top:

Silver (£49.99 per year) – bookings monitored for changes every 12 hours, flight connections monitored

Gold (£79.99 per year) – bookings monitored for changed every 2 hours, flight connections monitored

Amadeus charges Chris for every database look-up that MyFlights makes, which is partly reflected in the subscription fees.

Give it a go ….

The basic version is totally free so, frankly, you’d be silly not to give it a go.  One day something will happen to one of your British Airways flights and you will be eternally grateful you did.

Comments (52)

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  • Julie says:

    I have My Flughts app. I have got a few flights coming up for a jaunt around the USA which have had various changes, aircraft type, time etc. I have also got Check my Trip. On some changes I have had notifications from CMT and BA 2 days before MF so it’s not the quickest

  • Paul says:

    It’s a very helpful app and will also alert you to BA seat shifting when they wont!

    I have been bumped out of the emergency exit row for a flight next week and “my flights” told me immediately. When I logged in the new seats are also exit row but the second exit almost at the back of the plane. The first exit row is of course occupied, no doubt by friends of special services staff or perhaps just someone with a higher PCV score (personal customer value) higher than mine.

  • Drav says:

    “eternally grateful”, “invaluable”….
    sounds like a decent app but save us from the hyperbole… though I appreciate that you admit this article is purely to advertise your mate’s product now he has two new paid options

    • Genghis says:

      IIRC the last article (now superceded by this one) used the phrase “saves my bacon” 🙂

    • Rob says:

      Download it, try it for a year (especially if you are running 10 bookings at once as we are at peak times) and then tell me in a year you think it’s rubbish.

      The more prosaic use of it, even without monitoring, is that you have a one click listing of all your flights, times, ticket numbers etc.

  • Lee says:

    Shame that it has become a charged for service now, having grabbed everyone offering it for free. Whilst at the same time ignoring Android which makes up the majority of smartphone users.

    So it is no longer a product that is recommended. Not a fan of designers who become greedy yet lazy in developing their app.

    Which is a shame as it is or was very useful. Was because unless you pay top dollar the airline will probably inform you first.

    • Tony says:

      Good luck with relying on the airlines to inform you first of anything. This app still works for free and has recently highlighted important changes to my bookings with both BA and Qatar flights. Said airlines have still failed to notify me of the changes – one of which is a timetable change of 8 hours

    • Doug says:

      So you think the author should pay the Amadeus access charges for you whilst spending his time coding the app all for free. I don’t know the author, but I do know a good app.

    • Alan says:

      Eh? The free service is still available, the paid-for options are just that, OPTIONS.

    • Adam M says:

      I have the free version of this app and trust me the airlines do not inform you first. The app has informed me of various plane changes, similar to the 777 replacing the 787 as above and also cancelled airline bookings with Srilankan and Qatar where I was never informed officially by the airlines.
      Just because it doesn’t support android shouldn’t mean it gets slated. I’m unsure if I will pay for it but the free version works just fine for me (for now).

    • DV says:

      Get an iPhone and stop whining.

    • CV3V says:

      Their is still a free service, don’t understand why it is wrong for an app developer to monetise an app to pay for all the associated costs incurred, and make a profit.

      The app has helped me a lot, BA will change aircraft type and seat reservations and often not notify you. Especially true of reward bookings which are often booked 12 months in advance.

    • Lady London says:

      I am sure we were told some time ago an Android version would be available. Does anyone have any news?

      I am one of the eternally grateful ones as an early flight change alert saved my bacon more than once! I stopped using it a long time ago as it’s not Android and everything is on my phone now that I use for travel.

      • Alan says:

        Haven’t heard anything more on it, but TBH I’m not that fussed – once I’ve added a flight then alerts arrive by email anyway. The easiest thing might be if Chris recoded the website to more of a responsive UI design such that it reflowed neatly for mobile browsers.

    • Rob says:

      There is zero chance the airline tells you first, I promise you!

      • Alan says:

        Haha indeed – I’m yet to *ever* be informed by BA of any changes, despite having some bookings that were a sea of red when you logged into MMB! (AwardWallet has informed me of the change on a few occasions)

  • Chris Cannon says:

    I find this app vital. Especially for plan changes – not so much the first class issue you raise but more the emergency exit rows changing when BA decide to mess about with A319-321s

  • Isa says:

    I’m sure it’s a very helpful app but since I’m not going to buy an iPhone just for that (or for anything really, I don’t like iStuff), I’ll do without 😉

  • PeacefulWaters says:

    It works well enough on iPad too.

  • Botham says:

    Thanks for the tip.
    In entering my forthcoming Delta / Virgin flights manually I discovered that the flight times have changed. Maybe they told my cruise agent, who hasn’t told me, but otherwise I may not have discovered this.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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