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I made a stupid mistake. Why was it so hard for the airline to fix?

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Qatar Airways. Nary a day goes by when the airline doesn’t win an award. On board and online, it trumpets its eight consecutive win as the ‘World’s Best Airline’ from Skytrax. In fact, we gave it ‘Best Business Class Seat and Service’ in our very own Travel and Loyalty Awards last year.

The airline’s place in the market is hard to dispute. The now eight-year old Qsuite remains one of the best, if not the best, business class suites. Qatar Airways is already lining up the ‘Next Gen’ version which is likely to break cover sometime in 2026 or 2027.

On the ground, an extensive network of lounges frequently offer a la carte dining for business class passengers, something offered by very few carriers.

Changing name on a Qatar Airways flight ticket

It’s a similar story on board, with Diptyque amenities and polished in-flight service that’s always professional, if not a little robotic. A turndown service is available whilst meals are truly dine-on-demand: on my recent flight I had my dinner at ‘breakfast time’ and crew didn’t bat an eyelid.

The rollout of a caviar service in business class is impressive. It may only be available on 13 routes, but that’s 13 more than pretty much any other airline. Meanwhile, the airline’s roll-out of ultrafast Starlink satellite connectivity on the 777 fleet has outpaced its targets.

Having just flown Qatar Airways to Australasia and back – a lot of flying, even for me – I am still a big fan. Except ….

When things go wrong

When things go right, they really go right. But as soon as there’s a problem things start to fall apart.

In our case, I had accidentally booked my brother’s tickets under the name ‘Alex Jones’ rather than ‘Alexander Jones’, his full name and that printed in his passport.

Obviously, this was entirely my fault. I should have known better. I’ve literally known him all my life!

It wasn’t until we got to the check-in desk at Heathrow that we realised there was a problem, after the Qatar Airways agent highlighted the issue. Fortunately, after 10 minutes or so and a couple of phone calls she said it wasn’t an issue and that she could print a boarding pass with his full name. Phew.

Changing name on a Qatar Airways flight ticket

Worried about his return flight (which was booked on a separate ticket), we phoned Qatar Airways Privilege Club whilst on holiday to sort the issue. Unfortunately, it was not so simple.

We were repeatedly told that correcting the name was not possible on Avios redemptions and that the only option would be to cancel the ticket and try to rebook, in the hope that the business class seat would reappear in the Avios pool. I had no doubt that this was a risky strategy.

Why is this Qatar’s policy? My research shows that even a standard cash ticket only allows a name correction of three letters of less; going from Alex to Alexander is an additional five characters.

Clearly, however, it is technically possible given the check-in agent was able to do it at Heathrow. Taking a risk, my brother decided to leave it and try and do the same on his return flight from Brisbane.

Doing nothing proved to be a mistake: the check-in agent insisted they were unable to do anything and that it simply was not possible. She even tried calling internally, only to be told nothing could be done. His only hope was to call the Privilege Club line again. Over the course of around two hours, they both tried to gain approval for what, in theory, should be a simple change.

With just an hour before check-in closed, he tried calling the Privilege Club line again. This time, after pleading his case, he was told to send photos of his passport and driving licence to a particular email and call again when he had done so – no promises made.

With just five minutes to spare, he was told it had been accepted. All he had to do was pay the name correction fee (around £50) and the ticket was reissued.

Hallelujah – but why did it have to be so painful? If it was possible all along, why make it such an arduous process?

Changing name on a Qatar Airways flight ticket

Computer says yes

Qatar Airways is far from alone, of course. Airlines are notorious for making notionally simple things complicated – sometimes because ageing IT infrastructure literally prevents it and sometimes simply because of inertia.

Yet Qatar Airways did appear to be particularly difficult here. The same issue with Qantas, for example, was easily (if slowly!) resolved via a single telephone call, for free. I asked other major global airlines what their policies are:

  • Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, Lufthansa and SWISS publish a helpful guide confirming that name corrections for nicknames are permitted (such as Bill to William) and, presumably, Alex to Alexander.
  • United Airlines allows name corrections when limited to a few letters on a case-by-case basis. However, they confirmed going from Alex to Alexander and Bill to William would both be permitted.
  • Virgin Atlantic’s policy allows free name corrections in the case of spelling mistakes or if you have legally changed your name. They confirmed Alex to Alexander would also be permitted.

Even easyJet, a low cost airline, told me that “We apply common sense in using discretion to rectify mistakes such as shortened names free of charge.”

Customer support is just as crucial to the customer experience as seating, food and service; sometimes more so. It is when paying passengers are most stressed that a touch of humanity can go a long way in fostering loyalty.

Comments (229)

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  • Phillip says:

    What is Qatar’s official line on this? Because airlines telling you something is permitted is one thing, while agents on the ground or at a call centre can tell you another! Happens all the time and then you end up trying not to tell them how to do their job while telling them what their own policies actually are!

    • Rhys says:

      Official line, as per the article, is that on redemptions it’s not possible. On other tickets it’s limited to three characters.

      • Littlefish says:

        Yikes! That’s Qatar out for the Fish family then. My wife’s Passport name is one letter different to her legal name (and thousands of UK passport holders are more letters different).
        It’d be a really great HfP article to name and shame those airlines we can book with avios who have nil or minimal letter’s different policies (AA, IB, AY, QF, CX, BA, EI, JL, RJ, AT etc) ; and a similar for the Skyteam reward flights.
        Sorry for your issue Rhys, great you’ve flagged it.

        • Rhys says:

          As long as you use the name as in her passport you should be ok.

          Or change the passport?!

        • John says:

          How would any airline know what the “legal name” is if you book with the name on the passport and present that passport?

          Only difficulty would be if you have multiple citizenship and travelling on an itinerary where you need to show the airline both passports, and the other passport has a slightly different name.

          “Helpfully”, the UK is the only country in the world which permits multiple nationality but will refuse to renew the British passport unless one or the other is changed to match.

          • Mike Fish says:

            Seems reasonable, you can have as many citizenships as you like but the names need to match. I fail to see the issue.

          • Bagoly says:

            @Mike Fish
            But some names vary by language – there was a big argument about this between Lithuania and Poland about this for 30 years until 2021.
            It was as though an Irish government would insist that any Brit called Douglas had to have an Irish ID card say Dubhghlas.

          • Bagoly says:

            @John – that is actually rather helpful in terms of reducing future practical problems!

            Making the expiry dates of passports 10 years after issue rather than 10 years after expiry of previous one was also a sensible decision to save grief for people visiting Germany after then 10 years.

          • meta says:

            You don’t need to show airlines any of your other passports or indeed you can use one for the airline and the other for the immigration unless you need a visa to enter and used a more favourable passport. You only need to show the correct passport to the immigration officers. The two are not automatically linked and in many cases it doesn’t matter. You may sometimes get asked at Immigration if you hold any other nationalities or passports just like you would have to declare on a, for example, visa application or ESTA-type documents if they ask. It’s a common misunderstanding. Done this hundreds of times. My BAEC/QR/X airline accounts sport just my British passport and I have never changed it and just present it for check-in and I use my other if I need to for entering/leaving other countries.

        • cin4 says:

          How did you manage to get a passport not in a legal name?

      • Phillip says:

        I was referring specifically to the correction of shortened names. For example, United’s or Virgin’s policies that you quoted, just by looking at their website, you wouldn’t know for sure if they’d correct a nickname/shortened name etc. And QR clearly did it once. And then twice. So are we saying both cases were exception to policy and you should expect QR to refuse (at least to start with) such cases?

  • Claire f says:

    I’ve just booked my first qatar flight using avios to vietnam. My qatar account didnt have my middle name included so when it used my saved details this didn’t get added. Luckily I noticed this and went back and added the full name, glad I did given this article. Glad you also managed to sort this Rhys!

    • AlexWlkr says:

      Middle names in Vietnam are very important. You’d probably be ok for international airlines, but fly Vietjet and they’ll sting you for a name change fee. Thankfully its only around £4

      • Bob says:

        Sting did a lot of heavy lifting here. £4 LOL!

      • John says:

        That’s only the case for Vietnamese people since 90% of people have the top 15 surnames, and there are fewer than 2000 possibilities for each of the “first” and “middle” names, so if everyone omitted their “middle” name, on any given day at any airport hundreds of people could swap their tickets.

        • Rob says:

          This is apparently a major loyalty fraud issue – happens in the Middle East too. Very easy to find someone else with your name whose account you can use.

          • Occasional Ranter says:

            I omitted my wife’s middle name on a booking on Air Asia from Chiang Rai via Bangkok to Hanoi. Couldn’t believe what a fuss they made about it at the time but now I guess it makes more sense. Took 30+ minutes of wrangling computer systems and getting clearances from managers for the checkin agent to sort.

    • Ian says:

      Middle names are not important

      • BJ says:

        +1, I never use my middle name when booking with Qatar or any other airline unless it clearly request it ( I cannot recall if any do). I’ve never had any issues.

      • Axel Heyst says:

        You are not of Spanish or Javanese origin I presume.

        Many Javanese only have one name but at least its difficult to get it wrong.

    • Barrel for Scraping says:

      Do airlines care about middle names? I’ve never put mine in a booking. I do in the API section though

      • BJ says:

        Yes, I think I’ve seen some airlines state ‘exactly as shown on your passport’ or similar on API forms.

    • Rhys says:

      Middle names are less important although Lufthansa told me that some jurisdictions require the entire name exactly as on the passport. I’ve never had a problem though and rarely use mine.

      • Phillip says:

        Turkish has been fussy before. They once advised me to rebook a new ticket with all names present, and then cancelled the original booking that was missing middle names and issued a full refund.

    • C2K77 says:

      I’ve 72 countries under my belt. IRO 350 cities and when it comes to names on flight tickets I think I’ve bothered with my middle name once & tbh I think that was un-intentional.
      I’ve had 3x 1 year and 2x 5 year US Visas and going back through my current passport even CBP & DHSS have omitted it when passing back the authorization and/or US Consular Services forgot to add my middle name on more than one of those visas.
      China didn’t seem to care last fall and ( rightly or wrongly) I always assumed they’d be fairly strict.

      Re the Spanish Issue. Can confirm that no matter what she does BA are incapable of recognising the dual surname of my Spanish better half. Sometimes it hyphenates when it shouldn’t. Sometimes it just deletes the 2nd part. ALL the time it demands manual entry of her API despite it having been unchanged in her FF account and our HHA. Never been an issue thankfully but she just gave up on their system getting & keeping it right

  • Phillip says:

    During my SAS millionaire challenge, I booked a Delta award ticket with a connection in ATL. After booking and while on my outbound journey, I wanted to change the ticket to have a longer connection but SAS insisted that they couldn’t change partner tickets, especially once the journey has commenced. I was told this by more than one agent. On the ground Delta were more than happy to change it (for free) but they couldn’t re-issue the ticket as it was SAS stock. The lounge agent in ATL tried, the call centre tried, and the check in agent in MEX tried. All along, Delta was happy to do it for free, I could even see the new flights in the reservation every time, but they couldn’t reissue. In the end, I managed to get Delta to save the new flights in the booking, and then called SAS and explained that I was at the airport, Delta had changed my flights but they couldn’t reissue, and could SAS reissue? I had 45 minutes to go before departure at which point the agent was very helpful and the ticket was reissued in 10 minutes. All that was needed was a little communication.

    • BJ says:

      I think in many cases airlines can barely even access much information on tickets issued by others, never mind modifying them.

      Did you get your million?

    • Rhys says:

      To be fair, airlines have different policies about changing a flight completely like that and technically your ticket was issued by SAS.

      • Phillip says:

        It was issued by SAS, but it’s never been a problem for airlines like BA when it comes to partner bookings and vice versa – airlines like CX IB or QR on BA issued stock – certainly not at airports. It’s how airlines choose to communicate with partners – same when flights are cancelled or during IRROPS. Some just do it better than others either because they have the systems in place or because they can actually be bothered.

    • Simon says:

      My experience is that Delta agents are incredibly helpful and will do everything they can in situations like this, but if it’s not on their stock they get stuck every time. I had a similar thing with a DL flight on VS stock.
      There’s a whole other article – why stock is still an issue in the era of alliances, codeshares, and revenue pooling.

  • Kevin C says:

    I was due to be flying from Brisbane to London with Qatar today. This has been cancelled (cyclone Alfred’s fault not the airline’s).

    I’ve been given another slot but it’s not for a while. They will fly me back from another city but I am responsible for getting there. If anyone has any experience of what interlining Qatar will or won’t do in these circumstances, that would be helpful.

    And to be clear, the important thing is that everyone is safe rather than that my flight leaves on time.

    • John says:

      I don’t fully understand your question.

      Qatar will happily through check bags to a separate oneworld ticket, but not sure how that is relevant to you, since I take you to mean that QR has offered to let you fly out of (e.g.) SYD or MEL instead.

      If you are able to get from BNE to your new starting point on Qantas, Qantas will through check bags from a QF revenue ticket to a QR redemption ticket, or a QF redemption ticket to a QR revenue ticket, but not from rev to rev or redemption to redemption.

      • Kevin C says:

        Oh, I think I used the wrong term. Sorry.

        I was actually trying to get people’s experience of Qatar putting passengers on another One World airline, though these are also likely to be very busy for the next few days.

        • Phillip says:

          I haven’t needed to do it with Qatar, but my personal policy is to speak to them equipped with other available options that you are willing to accept. Otherwise I find airlines will offer you the option of least effort for themselves. Start with OW options and also ask for non OW options.

  • DW says:

    Don’t get me started on apostrophes…

    • paul says:

      Or hyphens !!

      My wife’s name is Ann-Marie but many companies cannot cope and list her without the hyphen.

      They are happy to fudge the rules when it suits them.

      • John says:

        Spaces and hyphens are irrelevant. As long as all the letters* in the Machine Readable Zone of your passport are present there can be no problem.

        *Some countries use diacritics in the name field, but the MRZ will only contain the 26 English letters.

      • Bagoly says:

        I understand the emotional aspect, but if I were in that situation I would conclude that the world has changed since birth, explain gently to parents if still alive, and do the legal change in relevant country(ies) to change it to AnnMarie or Ann Marie at source – i.e. new birth certificate, passport etc.
        Otherwise it is stress for the rest of one’s life.

        • Novice says:

          You don’t get a new birth certificate if you change your birth name legally. You get a legal document from your lawyers and every time you need to show your birth certificate, you also show this legal name change document. I know this because I hated my given name so asked my parents to change it when I turned 16 as part of my presents. It was a bit of a nightmare as everyone including in school tried to use the old name but I didn’t answer to the old name anymore so after a while everyone realised that nobody can beat my determination so just started calling me the new name I chose.

  • Ash says:

    Qatar Airways’s customer service is completely atrocious and their online form submission is something from the 20th century. I submitted two complaints to them and they ignored both – at least BA, whilst taking their sweet time, does respond to complaints.

    • Phillip says:

      BA has regulators to answer to if they don’t. Or at least channels for customers to escalate if it’s worth their time.

      • Alison says:

        How do we find out regulators for other airlines. My complaint to Intercaribbean is just ignored and I don’t feel they should just get away with it. They ruined the start of a holiday unnecessarily and simply ignored requests for help.

    • Ian says:

      BA do not respond to many complaints!

  • Terry Butcher says:

    In my experience, this is not at all unusual. I’ve seen and heard huge arguments at Gatwick from easyJet passengers who have not booked in their correct, full name – and are now having difficulties because their passport is in their full name.

    • BJ says:

      Doesn’t EasyJet have a facility for changibg names? I seem to recall something about that as I thought it very unusual.

      • Phillip says:

        Yes, free up to 3 letters and then beyond that it is possible with a fee. I imagine people at check in get thrown by it if they only realise it then. I don’t know if EasyJet then tells them to go away and change it online and then come back. But overall, I’d say Easyjet deserves credit here for how easy they make it.

  • GM says:

    They’re criticised all the time, but think even Ryanair would have made this easier. They’d charge, of course, but I’d just want it done. Had a great time on the Qatar flights I took over a year ago, but I was also relieved things went to plan because had read that they don’t do well with problems!

    • Erico1875 says:

      I booked a flight for my daughter in law in her married name. When online check in a a few days before flying, I realised her passport was in her maiden name.
      Ryanair via online chat were very helpful and changed name for free

      • Bagoly says:

        Soon after marriage I booked my wife’s ticket with my surname although she had not changed legally.
        OLCI so only realised at the departure gate.
        Fortunately I carry our wedding certificate in my travel file, and Ryanair gate agent accepted that.
        The checked bag (shows on the boarding pass) was already loaded, so denying boarding would have caused a delay …

      • GM says:

        I wanted proof of not flying for insurance when I had Covid before and was SHOCKED that the Ryanair online chat were brilliant!! Even better if they didn’t charge you.

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