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Did you know lastminute.com lets you refund non-refundable flights?

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The price gap between refundable and non-refundable flights is normally huge, as we all know.  The risks of buying a non-refundable flight can be partly offset by travel insurance, but that doesn’t cover every possible reason for cancelling.

Sometimes you don’t need to travel anymore for reasons which insurance doesn’t cover.  Broken up with your partner?  Lost your job?  Got a new job?  Reward availability opened up?  Found a better flight deal via a Head for Points article?  Simply changed your mind about going?  Your travel insurance isn’t paying out.

lastminute.com offers a little-known ‘no excuses needed’ insurance policy called Full Flex for non-refundable flights.  I’m sure you can see how this could be useful.

Oddly, Full Flex is very rarely discussed, even though lastminute.com has offered it for at least two years now.  I don’t know of anyone who has ever used it, yet alone claimed on it.

(EDIT: there is a comment below from a reader who did use this, and claimed on it. He received his refund voucher immediately once he had called to cancel.)

Take a look at the screenshot below (click to enlarge).

I have priced up a Virgin Atlantic business class ticket to New York for March.  The cost is £1,959.

lastminute.com Full Flex

For an extra £80.88 per person, each way, I can turn my ticket into a ‘virtual’ refundable one:

As the lastminute.com site says:

  • Can’t travel anymore? You can cancel any time for any reason. No questions asked.
  • Hassle free: Just give us a call and we’ll send you a voucher worth 90% of the original ticket price
  • No Handling fees & priority assistance: we will not charge handling fees to cancel or modify your booking.
  • You’ll receive a voucher with a value of 90% of the ticket price to use within 12 months for your next reservation. Any cancellation request applies to the whole booking and not individual sections or legs booked.

You won’t get your refund in cash.  It will come – within 48 hours of requesting cancellation – in the form of a lastminute.com gift voucher, valid for 12 months against a flight booking.  This is hardly a massive restriction in my view, given what you are being offered.

In my example, the extra cost was 8.5% of the original ticket price.  This appears to be standard, looking at various examples.  Note that lastminute.com does NOT include the cost of Full Flex premium in calculating the 90%, which means:

  • You book a flight for £1,000
  • You pay (roughly) £1,085 including Full Flex insurance
  • You get £900 back if you choose to cancel, in the form of a lastminute.com flight voucher

Doing the maths including the premium, you are only getting back 83% of what you paid – although that still isn’t bad.

The option comes up during the payment process, once you have entered your name and address and after the page encouraging you to add car hire.  Note that the maximum claim is €5,000.  As this is an insurance policy you are allowed to change your mind within 14 days and get your premium back.

The rules appear straightforward and, if you want to lock in a good deal but are not 100% certain of making the dates, this could be a real option.

The only snag I can see with Full Flex is that war, natural disaster and the like are not covered – you cannot cancel if a problem breaks out at your destination. This could be a risk as the insurer would not pay even if the event was not your reason for cancelling.

For absolute clarity, Full Flex does NOT turn your ticket into a ‘real’ flexible one.  You cannot change the date or routing for free as you could with a ‘real’ fully flexible ticket.  Neither does it give you the additional airline miles or tier points that a ‘real’ fully flexible ticket offers.  The ONLY benefit you get (but it is a very good benefit) is the ability to cancel your flight without question at any point for a 90% refund.

Comments (80)

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

  • Sam says:

    And of course, Last Minute will almost always be making more money back from taxes / apd that normally do get refunded from ‘non refundable’ tickets. I am assuming you don’t get any money due on top of your 90%?

    Quite a clever ticket!

    • tony says:

      No, you get 90% of the total you pay them.

      (people do seem incredibly cynical this morning…)

  • XYZ says:

    OT as no bits today: In Co-Op, can you use Paypoint services on the self-checkouts?

  • Dawn says:

    O/T – I want to book a flight to Fort Lauderdale with BA and when I checked their website they said they fly there directly from Gatwick. Then when I do the search it keeps coming up saying they don’t fly this route and I have to go indirectly.
    Has anyone flown this directly? Am I doing something wrong?
    thank you 🙂

    • John says:

      BA no longer flies this route as of September 8th

    • John says:

      Genuinely trying to be helpful here: the first result on Google for BA LGW FLL is a blog about the route’s cancellation.

      • Dawn says:

        Thank you ! I missed this then on google as the link I found on google (high up) was all about the 9 hour flight to FLL. And when I clicked on the link it took me to the BA page giving me all the details. Appreciate your help. 🙂

    • Nick_C says:

      Sadly, this route was a spoiler to try to stop Norwegian. When Norwegian switched to MIA, BA pulled FLL. You now need to connect, somewhere like PHL. Can be worth the connecting flight if you don’t need a car in Fort Lauderdale.

      • Dawn says:

        Thank you! I wanted to connect with a cruise leaving from FLL, but I can change my plans.

        • planeconcorde says:

          Alternatively fly into Miami (MIA) and do a ground transfer to Fort Lauderdale cruise port. The journey is usually less than an hour when traveling out of rush hour. Super shuttle will take you from MIA to the Fort Lauderdale area. For at least the big brand cruise ships, on arrival back into Fort Lauderdale they usually offer coach transfers (at an additional fee) to both FLL and MIA airports. This can’t always be booked in advance, but are usually sold during the cruise. I have done this myself many times, fly into MIA and take a cruise departing Fort Lauderdale.
          Obviously, another option is to hire a car. Many car operators have a depot near the port or at FLL airport and will provide a free transfer to the cruise ship terminal.

    • Lady London says:

      I flew AC to FLL at an excellent price. Good experience even in Y. Was via YYZ though. So these days you’d need the new Canadian ESTA.

  • Zara says:

    I once used their cancellation clause and they took a week to review and send me the voucher. I was abit worried as I didn’t want to make another booking until I had a refund of sorts in my hand, and on the other hand I didn’t want to delay booking for fear of price increase. I rarely use lastminute.com so I found this quite an inconvenience. Everywhere else if I need to cancel, I get a cancellation email immediately even if it takes a few days for it to show up in my bank. If it’s a voucher,eg. Expedia, it’s immediate.

  • a9504477 says:

    So, in case you do have to cancel the ticket you’d altogether have lost about 20% of the ticket price and have to use a voucher within 12 month and no credit card protection on what you book with this. Not very impressive imo.

    • guesswho2000 says:

      Whatever you rebook could have CC protection as long as you pay at least £0.01 of the cost using a CC, regardless of the voucher.

      • Genghis says:

        Not necessarily as OTAs act as agent not supplier.

        • guesswho2000 says:

          Good point. Protected from issues with the agent, but not with the airline in that instance.

    • Rob says:

      As with all insurance, your lifestyle decides if it works. Perhaps you’re trying to get pregnant. Perhaps you’re a contractor who can’t plan ahead easily. Perhaps your job is at risk.

  • Doddy says:

    OT: We have done a switcheroo after hitting the BA Prem Amex £10k spend point. We will now have two 2-4-1 vouchers, one in my name and one in my wife’s. Can we use these vouchers on a single booking (family of four)?

    • Rob says:

      No. Needs to be two bookings.

    • SimonW says:

      Have just done this – needs to be 2 bookings, then call BA to “link” them up…. As an aside, huge thanks to rewardflightfinder – set up an alert, and boom, received email update of the 4 CW return to Chicago that we needed for next summer – what a fantastic website…..

      • Anna says:

        The last time I asked BA to link bookings (about 3 years ago) the CSA refused and wouldn’t budge so I’ve never bothered since then but we’ve always managed to get seats together. But if Simon W has done it recently it may just be a case of HUACA.

        I don’t know if it’s possible for 2 vouchers to be used on a phone booking? I’ve been able to add the 2 4 1 to a return leg myself, when it was my OH’s voucher being use, as a named person on his account so that element of it doesn’t seem to cause any issues.

        • SimonW says:

          This is what i discovered this weekend. I called up to book 4 seats with 2 vouchers (in mine and wife’s name), as it cant be done online. Agent told me he couldnt do it either!! His advice was to make the 2 bookings myself online, then call him back to link them. When we;ve done this over the past few years we have always been sat together…… Not sure if the linking makes any difference though…. 2 adults and 2 kids with same surnames in same HHA surely get put together regardless…..

        • Lady London says:

          It’s called “To Complete Party,” (TCP). As far ad I know it’s still possible to request this.

          Btw did BA pay out in the end, Anna?

          • Lady London says:

            was always possible to request this. I’m going back a loooong way but also heard someone managed it fairly recently. Flyertalk might have a recent report.

          • Anna says:

            Yes they did LL! CEDR were very good, I would definitely use them again.

          • Adam says:

            It is. I did it yesterday….highly manual though and seats have to be allocated by the ticketing / seating team in the back office (I.e. it doesn’t really link your bookings and the associated benefits).

  • James S says:

    O/T (as no bits) – I see there is a 27,000 promo bonus running on Plat Business cards for referrals. Is this only for referrals for other Plat Business cards or is it more flexible (as per referrals in the past)?

    • Jay H says:

      Works referring to any card that can be selected clicking through the referral link

  • jason says:

    OT reward booking on JAL international flight via BA.com, what the latest i can cancel and only be charged £35 is it 24 hours?

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