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Why won’t British Airways refund your seat reservation fees when you cancel a flight?

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I thought it was worth taking another look today at one of the most egregious money-making schemes pursued by British Airways – the refusal to refund seat reservation fees if you cancel your booking.

This was a hot topic before the pandemic, but went away for two years because – under the ‘Book With Confidence’ covid guarantee – BA was fully refunding what you paid, including seat selection fees. (The money was ring-fenced for paying future seat selection fees, but at least you got it back).

‘Book With Confidence’ is no longer offered, of course, so your seat reservation fees are back at risk.

BA seat reservation fees refund

What originally kicked off our campaign on this was a reader who cancelled two Avios seats in Club World to the US.  All of his Avios and other charges were refunded, less the administration fee, as usual.

However, British Airways refused to refund £500 of seat reservation fees.

Can you really spend £500 on seat reservation fees for a couple?

Unfortunately, yes.

I just did a dummy booking for Heathrow to San Francisco for March.   As you can see, for someone without British Airways Gold or Silver status or the oneworld equivalent, if you want to sit on the top deck of the Airbus A380 by the windows it will cost you £122 per person each-way – a total of £488 return for two.  Bargain.

BA seat reservation fees refund

There are two issues here, I think: is it made clear that your reservation is non-refundable? and is this ‘fair’?

Is it made clear that seat reservations are non-refundable?

British Airways has made some improvements to its wording since we first started highlighting this issue. When you go into ba.com to select seats, this is what you see (click to enlarge):

BA seat reservation fees refund

The terms and conditions are not shown, but require you to click a hyperlink.  This is not ideal, but probably acceptable. 

Under the old version of ba.com, you were shown a summary of the T&C with a further click required to see the full version. Unsurprisingly, this ‘summary’ did not include the key point – that your fee was non-refundable in virtually all circumstances.

Things have now improved in terms of clarity. When you click the ‘Terms & Conditions’ hyperlink, you are taken immediately to the full T&C document. The bit on ‘no refunds’ isn’t at the top, but it is there if you scroll down.

Regardless of the T&Cs, is this ‘fair’?

You might say ‘it doesn’t matter if it’s fair’.

Except, under UK contract law, it does.

There are lots of pieces of regulation which could come into play here such as the Consumer Rights Act 2015, the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977, the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999, the Sale of Goods Act 1979 and the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982.

Here is a very concise summary from the Government’s own website:

Businesses can keep your deposit or advance payments, or ask you to pay a cancellation charge, only in certain circumstances:

If you cancel the contract, the business is generally only entitled to keep or receive an amount sufficient to cover their actual losses that directly result from your cancellation (eg costs already incurred or loss of profit).

Businesses must take reasonable steps to reduce their losses (eg by re-selling the goods or services).

Non-refundable deposits should only be a small percentage of the total price.

Cancellation charges must be a genuine estimate of the business’ direct loss.

A good base line is that a consumer contract can only be imposed if it is ‘fair’.

It is difficult to see how retaining a payment of £488 for seat selection is ‘fair’ when the airline can cancel the underlying seat reservation without penalty and suffers no loss when you cancel, especially if the seat is cancelled well before departure.

Seat selection fees also appear ‘unfair’ in terms of the ‘power’ given to each party.  British Airways, according to the small print, is free to throw you out of your allocated seats for any reason it wants.

Intriguingly, if British Airways upgrades you, you don’t get a seat refund:

For the avoidance of doubt, paid seating will not be refunded if you are involuntarily upgraded;

It is difficult to imagine a court agreeing with that, especially if you paid for seats purely in order to be together but – due to the upgrade – you were separated. You do get a refund if you choose to pay to upgrade and do not want to pay for selection in the higher cabin.

In the case of an Avios redemption – or a fully flexible cash ticket – the airline is willing to refund the flight.  It is therefore difficult, in my mind, to put together a ‘reasonable’ justification for keeping the seat selection fees.

BA seat reservation fees refund

Is it worth fighting this if it applies to you?

If you are impacted by this, your options are to take British Airways to CEDR arbitration (here is our guide on how to do it) or, failing that, to MCOL / Small Claims (here is our guide on how to do that).

The bad news is that I know that some readers have lost their case at CEDR when trying to do this. This is because the arbitrator is not empowered to look at whether BA’s actions break consumer laws. They only look at whether British Airways has broken its own terms and conditions – which it hasn’t.

Here is a quote from a failed arbitration claim

Here is a quote from a CEDR arbitration decision refusing to order BA to refund seat selection fees:

Whist I recognise the passenger deems this provision unfair, I am unable to make a determination as to whether the same is unfair, binding, acceptable, balanced or not to the detriment of the consumer. Should the passenger be unsatisfied with my ruling, he is free to reject the decision and and to negotiate a settlement with the airline or to pursue the matter elsewhere should he wish to do so, including to dispute the validity of the abovementioned provision (or the airline’s terms and conditions as a whole) before a competent body or court.

Even if you win at CEDR or MCOL, these cases do not set legal precedent.  Settlement usually comes with the requirement to sign a confidentiality agreement, so it cannot even be publicised.

It would require a full court hearing to take place before legal precedent was set, as happened in – for example – Jet2 vs Huzar, the case which set the precedent that mechanical failure was not an excuse for not paying EC261 compensation.

Until someone does that, however, British Airways will carry on attempting to extract large sums for seat selection fees on cancelled flights.

The only good news is that, with the new Club Suite, the seats are created more or less equal and there is very little justification for spending money on a reservation.  Even if you end up not being able to sit together, other passengers should be more willing to move onboard to accommodate you as they would not be worse off.


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Comments (125)

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

  • Jimbo says:

    I agree BA are notorious with these fees. I disagree however with your assumption that other pax will be more willing to swap seats given the new coffins in BA Club world. I always book window. I’m not moving to a central seat for anyone wanting to sit with their travel partners.

    • SammyJ says:

      If you’re in the window though, you’re unlikely to be in a position that would be of benefit to someone travelling with a partner. If you had one of a pair of middle seats and a couple of family were split across different middle pairs, it would be pretty churlish to refuse to swop, they’re all the same.

  • AJA says:

    At least paying for a seat is optional. We don’t need to pay but then have to accept we may not get the best seat on the plane. At the end of the day it’s just a seat on the plane and you still hopefully get transported to your destination (assuming flights don’t get cancelled or worse the plane crashes).

    If it helps keep base fares lower then that’s also a positive however I’m not sure that is actually the case.

    It is one reason to justify going for at least Silver status as you get to choose the seat for free at time of booking.

  • Michael C says:

    Paid for the first time ever in Oct, but slightly special circumstance: son and I in economy on A380 Miami, so comparatively “happy” to pay for a twin seat upstairs, and it did indeed feel that it was about as good as long-haul economy gets.

    Still think charging in club is a shocker.

  • NorthernLass says:

    I consider free seat selection to be the second-best perk of BA/OW status (after lounge access). Having checked a couple of (separate) future bookings for myself and family, Ryanair wants £11 for an exit row seat on a 3-hour flight (and you get a LOT of legroom in those), and BA wants £35 for an exit row on a shorter flight! As neither offers any meaningful refreshment or IFE on short-haul, I think FR is definitely the better option here.

    • Matt says:

      I completely agree that it’s a great perk but mainly because of the seat selection fee – it feels like you’re getting £35 value for nothing, whether you would otherwise be prepared to pay for it or not. You could argue that it keeps prime seats free for status holders, but unless you’re going for a specific seat (like an exit row), I’m not convinced that it makes much difference.

      However, I’m equally not convinced that value would be perceived any differently for someone with status if the £35 fee was refundable or not, which is the crux of the article.

    • David says:

      Yes, but then you take, comparatively, a handful of flights a year as a leisure traveller. If you sat down and worked out the cost to you to get to OW status with your travel patterns, even with the double TP/BA Hols route you seem to use, you’d be far better off just paying for seat selection and/or lounge access as and when needed.

      • Milos says:

        Spot on, David. People usually talk themselves into believing that what they spent their time and money on was totally worth it

      • NorthernLass says:

        Actually that’s not the case, lounge access for me plus guest, and free seat selection for everyone on my bookings are well worth having status. Then you have priority check in and boarding, extra baggage, lower likelihood of being bumped/made to check in hand luggage, the benefits go on!

  • Nick says:

    Worth noting here that seat fees are refundable if you don’t get the ones you book (other than in a free upgrade, as above)… but you have to claim. They don’t dispute it though, it’s paid pretty quickly. This is because they struggle to claim there’s no breach of contract on that one, it’s just annoying they insist on people claiming rather than paying proactively.

  • robkeane says:

    I think the average person looking at that screenshot would say that if BA actually wanted people to know that seat selection fees are non-refundable, that a simple “Please note, seat selection fees are not refundable under any conditions” on that screen would solve the problem. linking to a T&C is being deliberately obtuse.

    • Rob says:

      Agreed

    • Jonathan says:

      I’m not sure if BA would be forced to refund seat selection fees if they cancelled the flight (for whatever reason), and the passenger opted for a refund instead of rebooking

      • Lady London says:

        Yes in that case BA has to refund the seat selection fees. They might, of course, try to keep the seat selection money in their stickky fingers by encouraging the passenger to rebook to another flight and also to take a seat reservation on that flight.

        I am absolutely certain it would not hold up if BA cancelled your flight, you took a refund, and they refused also to refund seat reservtion fees. ISTR they tried that for a bit during covid, but then gave up on it as a strategy according to reports.

  • Greg says:

    I paid £220 for 2 seats last year for a 12 hour flight to Mauritius which actually leaves this evening

    COVID was back in the news and I detest being stuck facing backwards in the middle of a 2-4-2 configuration. I booked 1J and 1K

    9 months later BA changed to a Club Suites 777 and in their wisdom moved me to the back row in the middle of the plane while somebody had taken all the front row seats. I changed to suites 3A and 4A as rows 1 and 2 required additional payment.

    Excuse my French but FFS. They then reverted to the old style and kept my seats meaning I had 2 backward facing seats in different rows. 3A and 4A

    After a few heated calls getting nowhere let’s see what happens this evening

    • SamG says:

      Tonights LGW-MRU is club suites. Don’t sit in 1K and then apply for a refund

    • Jonathan says:

      This sort of thing proves BA are a law onto themselves, and don’t like honest customers

  • Mark Hopwood says:

    I agree with your position but the key takeaway for me is the value of status with BAEC. Some people laugh at those who seek to gain and protect status with TP runs or inserting additional stops In itineraries. However, these fees alone help justify getting silver or gold status.

    • Novice says:

      It’s easy when employers are paying for you tho. It’s hard to justify TP runs if you add cost of getting to airport and bk home, accommodation, f&b costs, sun cream and other essentials etc if you really get down to actual cost; tp runs are not worth it for solo travellers.

      It probably just works for benefits of couples or families and especially on someone else’s money.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Erm not really a TP run if you need all that other stuff

        But as a solo traveller don’t you erm travel solo anyway so pick a place with you TP and solo travel 🙂

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