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UK airlines warned by CAA and CMA over customer rights

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This may or may not be a coincidence, but just a few hours after British Airways attempted to stitch up passengers booked to Bangkok this Winter, the Civil Aviation Authority and Competition & Markets Authority issued a joint threat to UK airlines – respect the legal rights of your customers or else.

You can see the letter sent to the airlines yesterday by clicking here (gov.uk, PDF).

UK airlines warned by CAA and CMA over customer rights

The letter implies that many airlines are failing to meet their legal requirements when dealing with customers. To quote:

We are concerned that some airlines may not be doing everything they could to avoid engaging in one or more harmful practices, including:

  • selling more tickets for flights than they can reasonably expect to supply and failing to warn consumers about the ensuing risk of cancellation;
  • not always fully satisfying obligations to offer consumers re-routing (including with alternative carriers where necessary) in the event of cancellation; and/or
  • failing to give consumers sufficiently clear and upfront information about their rights on cancellation, and/or to provide adequate and appropriate support and care where flights are cancelled or disrupted.

Anyone who booked a British Airways flight to Bangkok for this Winter may be having a wry smile at this point.

British Airways Bangkok flight cancellations

What has happened with British Airways flights to Bangkok?

As we reported on 9th April, British Airways decided over three months ago that it would not operate flights to Bangkok during the Winter season which starts on 29th October.

All flights were removed from sale in early April. However, passengers who had booked on these services were not told that they were cancelled.

Our article on 9th April caused a lot of concern for people who had British Airways tickets booked to Bangkok. People who called BA were told that they could not be rebooked because their seats had not been officially cancelled.

I was prepared to give BA the benefit of the doubt here. We are talking about many thousands of customers needing to be rerouted, and it made sense to wait until the call centre was running efficiently.

This week, BA finally emailed people with a Bangkok flight booking for this Winter.

Passengers were told, effectively, that their flight was cancelled and that they qualified for a refund. There was no attempt to offer them a rerouting, despite their legal right to one.

Even worse, when passengers called British Airways, they were refused a rerouting on the grounds that British Airways did not have any commercial arrangements in place. When pushed, agents said that they thought something might appear in the next week or so.

British Airways Bangkok flight cancellations

What Head for Points readers had to say

Here are some examples from emails I received this week:

“Was on hold for an hour to be told only option is a refund. I assume they’re legally obliged to switch to another airline even tho it’s a way off?”

“BA finally emailed us tonight to cancel our flights to Bangkok in Feb 2023. We went into Manage Your Booking as they suggested and there were no flight alternatives. We phoned BA and after 1 hour of call queuing we finally got through to a lady who told us that there are no alternative flights (even though BA are selling the Qatar flights on their website) and our only option is a refund. We quoted article 8 of EU regulation 261/2004 but to no avail!!”

“My flight to Bangkok was just cancelled (jan-23). Called BA and they said they don’t have any agreements in place with other airlines to book me an alternative flight and I should call in few weeks. Are they just trying to get me get a refund? I insisted that EU reg says they need to book me on an alternative flight (not my problem if they have no agreements in place). The lady said she can’t do anything and terminated the call. Shall I call and insist I want an alternative flight regardless if they have agreements?”

“Just called against the Executive Club and they said no reward availability with Qatar / Finnair and try to call commercial team as they can only book Avios seats. Is that true? Being sent back and forth between British Airways call centres.”

Agent said he can’t help me and he can’t comment on what the EU law says about my rights. Looks like they have been advised not to reroute. Unbelievable! Is there somewhere where I can report this?”

This one arrived late on Thursday evening:

“Just got off the phone with BA on the American number. The agent said they’ve had a new directive today stating “under no circumstances can they change companion vouchers to other airlines for the cancelled BKK flights” so only option is a refund or look for other Avios availability in same zone (not that anywhere close is in the same zone). Surely Illegal?”

(For clarity, yes, this is against EC261 which clearly states: “This Regulation …. shall apply to passengers having tickets issued under a frequent flyer programme or other commercial programme by an air carrier or tour operator“)

Why this is not acceptable

Now …. if a route is cancelled at short notice you could excuse BA for not being able to put a rerouting deal together quickly. However:

  • British Airways has been rerouting Bangkok passengers for almost two years now – Rhys on our team was rerouted on Qatar Airways when he went to Bangkok earlier this year on a 2-4-1 Avios ticket
  • BA removed Winter 2022 flights from sale in April – it has had over three months to put alternative arrangements in place (and these arrangements were already in place anyway, as Rhys found in February)

As the CAA and CMA say in their letter:

When cancelling a flight, airlines must offer re-routing, either using their own flights or if they cannot offer a timely replacement with another carrier. We consider that professional diligence requires airlines to have in place reasonably appropriate organisation and support staff to source replacement flights and complete the booking if consumers wish to take up this offer.

Just because BA has not been able to agree a cheap deal with Qatar Airways or another carrier to take Bangkok passengers does not change its legal liability – it will simply have to pay more for those seats.

My best guess is that British Airways has been deliberately encouraging passengers to take a refund. It has had over three months to put rerouting deals in place so getting call centre agents to say ‘it may take us a week or so to sort something out’ simply doesn’t cut it.

I reckon, in a week or so when most passengers have taken a refund and rebooked by themselves for (presumably) a higher fare, British Airways will magically turn up with a rerouting deal for those people who are determined to push for their legal right.

(EDIT: In the last few hours there have been reports of successful rebooking on Qatar Airways.)

We are happy to pass on these reader emails to the CAA and CMA if they want to know more.

The CAA and CMA letter to the airlines is here.

Comments (310)

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

  • jumpfrog says:

    I have had a hell of a time trying to rebook my 2 for 1 in Jan 23 to BKK. Initially, I went on to the chat function to rebook and the very helpful agent rebooked us on Qatar on the same dates. ASFAIK this is exactly what he was supposed to do whether an agreement was in place or not. Then, one hour later, I received a call from a senior manager in Dehli informing me the agent had rebooked us in error. He said we could not take those flights and would have to wait until an agreement is in place until we could rebook. I argued the issue but he would not listen. I accepted this and said I would check back in in a few days. The manager then cancelled the booking and issued a refund. I explicitly told him not to refund the ticket under any circumstances. His action completely screwed me over and made me illegible for a rebook! I then immediately called the silver line and the lady admitted the Dehli team had badly messed up but that she could not rebook me atm (still not true). Even though my booking had been processed for a refund, they would still honour the rebook as and when they could. I then called the silver line up again yesterday and the agent said she could indeed now rebook us on QR on the same times, albeit different flight times to my original rebook. Finnair and Royal Jordanian was also on offer. I agreed to QR and it is being processed and ticketed manually due to their screwup. Booking shows on QR site but not on BA yet. Cash price for my original rebook fare was £10.5k and the second rebook fare £7500. So perhaps they were trying to save a few quid by messing me about. In any case it is the complete shambles and BA will lie and obfuscate at every turn.

  • BJ says:

    Many people seem to be confused about bookings made with companion vouchers. They HAVE NO IMPACT ON YOUR RIGHTS, the companion has the same rights as everybody else so don’t accept any BA claims to the contrary.

    A good BA CSA will be fair and do their best to sort out the problems. What I did day of cancellation notice: requested reroute on Qatar or Finnair one stop from EDI to replace 1 stop BA from INV. No can do, the rebooking policy expires 29 October. No avios availability on either QR or AY in J so cannot change to that either. I therefore requested any available seat (not award seats) on BA to SIN or HKG with departure switch from INV to BKK under 300 mile policy. CSA was happy to do this. Problem was the connections from HKG or SIN to BKK. Cathay were operating twice daily I think but pulled the convenient schedule leaving one daily (at least at time of booking) so the result is a 7h layover in HKG on way out connecting to RJ and 8h on way back connecting from CX. This was with amex 241.

    Not ideal but I went for it because: departure now EDI as opposed to INV, convenient afternoon departure, overnight direct to HKG so a decent sleep (same on way back), no stress wondering what if/next. We can cope with the layovers in Pier or Plaza Premium, some reading, shopping, eating, showers, planespotting etc.

    My guess is that with the pushback BA are getting something better will come along and others will get sorted if they don’t cave and cancel. However, I just wanted to take what I could get when I could. Despite the HK covid lottery hopefully it’ll go ok.

    • Mike says:

      I was told by the BA call centre when BA cancelled my AVIOS booking that it could be rebooked only if there was AVIOS availability on another flight – they wasn’t – therefore no rebooking option – they seemed pretty certain.

      • PeteM says:

        They may have been certain, but they were wrong. Try again.

      • BJ says:

        No, they can (but just don’t want to) rebook you on any available seat regardless of award availability.

        • polly says:

          BJ, l was told HKG is outside the 300 mile transfer limit of SIN or KUL. But as usual it’s a HUACA. We have HKG o/w back to U.K. for NOV. Rumours abound that HKG is going the same way as BKK at some point. So waiting, and looking at options.
          One thing we did, (as CX cancelled our well timed flt from KUL to HKG) was nabbed aback up flight o/w on MAS in F, amazingly available! As we have no way of meeting the HKG flt now…wait and see now what happens…the weird thing was MAS had no J seats at all, but suddenly had F on every flight for weeks. Think they must have had a plane change.

  • Tim j says:

    Rob. Thank you for highlighting this. I am one of those who booked in February this year with cash for 4 flights over the Xmas holidays with my family (school aged kids). Therefore our dates are not flexible. I have been watching and waiting for this to happen ever since your article in April stating that BA would not be running its winter scheduled to Bkk. I called them in May as was told that the flights are still running and that I had nothing to worry about (even though I could see they were no longer on sale) and have called twice this week and both times been pushed to take a refund. The website offers no rerouting options but when pushed on the phone the operator was able to offer us a downgrade from premium to economy on a 16.5 hour flight on Qatar “for no extra cost”. The timings were much worse as it would mean my daughter missing her last day of school. We would never have chosen to fly indirect or economy over such a long flight so I requested they instead booked me on Eva which flies direct at similar times to original flights and offers premium cabin, as close to like for like as possible. Unsurprisingly they refused saying it was not something they were able to offer. When I quoted EC261 and referred them to the text on their own website they told me that I didn’t understand the regulations. I would have happily booked these flights instead in February had I known what a mess BA were going to make of my booking but now they are £2500 more expensive than they were and BA should pay the difference. I have made a complaint and also emailed Sean Doyle. The entire experience is very unedifying and shabby to say the least. I am now somewhat in limbo as I wait to see if BA offers an alternative as some have hinted. Thinking I may be forced to just book the alternative myself and then take them to court which is a headache I could do without.

    • BJ says:

      If you are happy to fly economy check the fares on EVA and Thai to see if it is worth just taking the refund from BA. I think there is also now a direct flight on Scoot from Gatwick to Bangkok so check that out too.

      • Andrew says:

        Just remember to take food, plenty of drinks, blanket, entertainment with you when you fly Scoot.

        Family only discovered that nothing was included after they boarded. (It was a last minute flight from Oz to attend a funeral.)

        • Metty says:

          Re Scoot LGW-BKK: haven’t they pulled the route, last flight 16-Aug-22?

    • yorkieflyer says:

      Finnair offer premium

  • Dave says:

    Had this with easyJet in May. Point blank refusal to rebook with another airline despite the cancellation being on a route that is only a few times a week. Said only option was refund or reroute/redate with easyJet only.

  • Tom says:

    I can’t help but think BA won’t have tried shafting customers of their rights prior to 31 December 2020. I can only assume BA knows the CAA and CMA bark with no bite, consumer protection as we’ve known it is long gone and everything’s gone to sh*t

  • ame says:

    We had this with BA for our Seville flights in September – changed from BA to Iberia , then cancelled without an option for alternatives. We are going for a wedding, so had booked this beginning of the year with cash, as our dates are not flexible. Another wedding guest took the refund, as couldn’t get though to BA and booked with another airline at a much higher cost. When we managed to get through, CSA was nice but we had to be like I can see the other Vueling flight which is a few hours later than original on BA’s website (which is now a ridiculous price) and would like to be put on that flight. CSA said she needed to ‘check the notes’ but proceeded with no problem.

  • Andrew. says:

    Why has it taken so long for the CAA and CMA to act?

    It feels like it’s taken someone senior in the CAA or CMA’s Granny to have been left in distress before they noticed.

    • PeteM says:

      They’re not really acting, are they – they’ve issued a press release…

  • Lewis says:

    Living in Thailand, the one thing everyone I speak to here is that they never fly British Airways to or from here. Plenty of much better options.

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