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Two readers get upset because BA Holidays is too quick to pay refunds

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UPDATE: BA Holidays contacted us this morning to say that any customer who has had their holiday cancelled but does still want to travel WILL be rebooked on request and where available, if they do not wish to book a new trip on ba.com. They will not be asked to pay any additional money for the same holiday based on alternative flights, irrespective of the current ticket price.

British Airways has, to its credit, been one of the better airlines when it comes to paying out cash refunds during coronavirus.

OK, it removed the website refund functionality on ba.com and effectively gave you a choice – claim a Future Travel Voucher online, or hang around on the telephone to ask for a refund. Once you called, however, your refund was generally paid promptly.

In its recent investigation into airline refunds, the Civil Aviation Authority was relatively pleased by how British Airways had handled things.

Has BA Holidays been a little too keen to refund people?

In the past week, two readers have contacted me with concerns over BA Holidays. Put simply, they feel that BA Holidays has been a little too efficient in refunding them.

BA Holidays operates under different rules to the airline. As a package holiday business, it must – by law – pay out refunds in cash within 14 days of a holiday being cancelled. Failure to do so would lead to the loss of its authorisation to sell package holidays.

This is the email the readers received:

We are contacting you about your upcoming British Airways Holidays trip.

As you may already be aware, your booking has been affected by flight cancellation(s) due to a revised flying programme in response to coronavirus COVID-19. This means we are unable to provide your British Airways Holidays itinerary as originally booked.

We are currently receiving exceptionally high call volumes and are very sorry if you have been unable to reach us by phone to discuss your options.

To prevent the need for you to contact us, we will be cancelling your British Airways Holidays itinerary and processing a full refund. This will be returned to your original form of payment within the next 7 – 10 days.


If you have already been in touch to arrange alternative plans following the cancellation of your flight(s), these will remain in place and you can disregard this email. You can check the status of your trip in Manage My Booking on ba.com. Your booking will only be refunded if it contains a cancelled flight.

While your original flight is no longer operating on your chosen date or time, you can check ba.com for alternative packages based on our revised flying schedule. When you are ready to rethink your travel plans, we have introduced additional flexibility so you can book with total confidence. This includes the removal of change fees for new bookings and low deposits on package holidays that can be paid in full as late as three weeks before travel. View the full details of our Customer Promise.

Prepaid seating refunds for your original booking can be requested using this claim form, please mention that your booking was cancelled due to COVID-19 when submitting your form.

We are very sorry that your trip has been affected in this way but look forward to assisting with your future travel plans.

British Airways Holidays

Here’s the problem …..

Neither of these readers want a refund.

They want a holiday.

Long-haul premium flights are currently very expensive. With airlines carrying few passengers, fares have shot up on the grounds that those who are travelling must travel and will pay whatever is needed.

BA Holidays could have rerouted these readers on other airlines, but presumably decided that it was too expensive. Instead, it chose to wash its hands of both readers and simply send back their money.

You will see from the wording of the email that, for anyone who had been able to get through to them, BA Holidays was willing to rebook. Once the email was sent it was too late.

One reader told me that he had repriced his trip and it would cost him an additional £8,000 to rebook it.

It is perfectly possible that some of these holidays could have gone ahead. We are not talking about people due to fly to New Zealand next week.

One reader (not the one whose bill had risen by £8,000) was going to San Francisco in February 2021 on a package booked in a recent BA Holidays sale. Whilst I wouldn’t want to place a bet on San Francisco accepting tourists next February, we are looking six months ahead and a lot can happen in that time. The odds are certainly not zero.

Issuing a refund now, without discussing it with the customer, seems excessive.


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Comments (42)

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

  • Adam says:

    I had similar experience. I wanted to postpone by Seychelles holiday but BA refunded me without me really asking for it and before I had an opportunity to request a change of date.

  • Jonathan says:

    Kind of annoying that holidays for 6 months time has been refunded yet I’m still waiting for mine from our June holiday that was cancelled in April/May. Having chased BA several times I’m told it’s in the queue but still yet to receive it.

  • James K says:

    Likewise – though short haul. We had a Monaco trip booked for october half term – with the helicopter transfer. Our Gatwick flights were cancelled, so we were refunded, even though there are Heathrow flights that we would have been happy to take – or at least decide a bit closer to departure date whether we still wanted to go…

    • King says:

      +1 Our Monaco trip, flights & Heli transfers were cancelled due to one flight from LGW being cancelled. LCY and LHR both had suitable options.

  • Kevin says:

    A friend reported the same, but called BA and they were able to offer new dates and discounted this to the previously price paid.

    A case of damned if you do, damned if you don’t. Whilst some may be unhappy, I’m sure many will be delighted to not have to call to arrange the refund.

  • Anna says:

    What are passenger rights in this scenario? Can you choose to re-schedule or is the operator only obliged to give you your money back? (I know it’s been mostly the other way around recently, with pax trying to get refunds and holiday companies trying to persuade them to re-book!)

  • Andrew Harrison says:

    I am still waiting for my refund for two ‘long haul’ cancelled flights in May! I have written twice, called on the phone four or five times and my final letter was in line with legal advice asking for my money within 14 days. On Monday I will be going down the HM Courts & Tribunal Service route! I understand these are challenging times, I’m self employed with no income! The CAA may be pleased with BA but after 10 years loyalty as an Exec Club member I certainly am not.

    • BLT says:

      Andrew, have you tried barefundhelper on Flyertalk. They have sorted my 2 refunds in a couple of days when I have messaged them.

      • andrew says:

        Thanks for this… will try them

      • Andrew says:

        BLT… I’ve been on Flyertalk and sadly after being inundated BA Refund Helper has hung up the boots… I did get some valuable advice from their though so now going down the Chargeback with Amex first before the Court route

  • Russell Tait says:

    I have been trying to contact BA to get a refund but they seem to have gone back to their old trick of cutting off the phone.

  • Will says:

    Similar story. BA holidays refuse to rebook onto EasyJet (Or train or anything else) to replace the BA cancelled return leg (within 14 days of the flight). Say ‘they have no mechanism to do so’. Also refusing eu261 compo.

    • meta says:

      You’re not due EU compo as it is suspended. But you have the right to reroute and duty of care. BA is blatantly denying this right to passengers. I’ll be taking them to small claims soon for my cancelled flight.

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

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