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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)

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

  • Andy says:

    Just had an issue with BA that finally got resolved in my favour after refusing to accepting that it couldn’t be done 5 times.

    After complaining about our business class flights to Sydney in January (something wrong on every leg) I was offered a £200 e-voucher, when I went to use it a few weeks later and following BA’s instructions in the e-voucher e-mail there was no box to input the voucher number. I complained saying I didn’t want the e-voucher as I hadn’t been able to use it. 5 times, once over the phone where the parrot I spoke to just kept telling me it should have worked, “very helpful response” and 4 e-mails saying they had no liability and it wasn’t possible to offer Avios. I just kept replying saying that if they stopped taking the easy option, someone could make that decision. To my surprise the 5th email was saying they had transferred 30000 avios to my account which was what I had originally asked for. 20000 to replace the £200 e-voucher and 10000 for the hassle. Just don’t take no for an answer

    • Mark says:

      I have just retired from the travel industry after 54 years and 2 of the Worlds best airlines are Qatar and Turkish Airlines.at 35,000 feet but at ground level they are a disaster for customer service.

  • Thomas says:

    Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I’m not sure about the former.

    Albert Einstein

  • Chris says:

    Experience from last year flying with Lufthansa from Heathrow. Ticket was booked in the name Chris while my passport says Christopher. (I am choosing to blame my laptop autofill function for this mistake). When trying to check in I was sent to the customer service desk. Was informed this is more than a 3 letter change but can be done. They made a call and made the change to outbound and return tickets and I had to pay about £40. Was fairly straight forward just an annoying costly error on my part. More careful now about checking details before submitting.

  • CD says:

    For those who ask here how about HFP sharing PRIVATELY a few vital phone numbers and that vital means of sending the passport photos that was the key to success. I’m writing in a bit of code here.

  • Kerry K-C says:

    It’s interesting reading some of the comments here that aren’t directly related to a change of name, so I thought I’d mention two instances where I had issues with Qatar and their handling of issues.

    A minor one was when I wanted to transfer points from Avios to Qatar. My surname is hyphenated on BA, but at the time Qatar’s system wouldn’t accept hyphens so I registered without. I then found I couldn’t transfer Avios due to a name mismatch! This has since been resolved.

    The major issues was when, as a party of three, we were sat in our A380 business seats in Bangkok getting ready for a relaxed, overnight flight to Amsterdam. After about half-an-hour there was an announcement that everyone had to deplane as a baggage handler had driven his truck into a cargo bay door! Chaos ensued as there were evidently no ground-handling staff capable of dealing with the problems of rebooking several hundred pax. All business and first pax were herded into a poor quality lounge and several hours went by, with a lot of pressure to talk to someone, before they finally managed to get someone who could start rebooking us. We ended up on a Thai flight direct to London which had clearly not been anticipating a full cabin so had a pretty appalling flight (including a very poor business class cabin). Needless to say our baggage followed several days later and we were all in ‘summer’ attire returning to the UK in January!!

  • Mark says:

    A friend of mine middle name is spelt incorrectly on his booking, will this cause him issues?

    • John says:

      Not unless it is a glaringly obvious misspelling. As the article states mistakes of up to three letters are tolerated

      • Mark says:

        Thanks John

        Its Reese on the booking instead of Rees

      • Vit says:

        Never know about this. I accidentally added a letter extra to my son name (I know, mrs was not impressed). I had to cancel the ticket and rebook as he was booked with his mom. I had to cancel the whole thing but yes the seat went back to inventory so we rebooked it again. Annoyingly at the cost of 50USD. Yes it was with QR. Next time I will just risk and state this at the check in desk haha

  • Lumma says:

    In 2014 I book three tickets from Lima to Cusco with Star Peru airlines and my phone auto corrected all three names as my own name after putting the correct names in. I had to go to their office in Lima and give them a hand written letter asking to make the change. I think it cost something like $30USD too.

  • Paul says:

    My wife uses Katie – ‘Catherine’ was on her NHS records from birth. A nightmare when dealing with nhs records & staff – eventually GP manager managed to get the records changed and now has no issues – but worth noting when naming kids at birth !! Don’t try and be clever. Think what they would like to use !

    • Rob says:

      I did actually do this. My (German) wife suggested longer versions of Max but I insisted it would just be Max, because everyone would call him that anyway. Although everyone asks if its short for something else so it still takes time ….

      Rob / Robert has never been a major issue although, in my almost 20 years in banking, I was always ‘Robert’. I really should have stamped on that on Day 1 but you they set up your email, print your business cards and you are a spotty little graduate trainee and you can’t really say ‘I’d like it all redone as Rob please’.

      • Roosit says:

        Talking of German names, when someone has an Umlaut or ß in their name on the passport, what is the correct way of inputting it into the airline’s system, esp. when it doesn’t allow those characters? Is there a standardised answer?

        • cin4 says:

          Yes. The obcious and normal transliterations of adding an e or ss.

          • cin4 says:

            “Obvious”, obviously.

          • Roosit says:

            Thanks. Given that’s not what the passport says, I was wondering whether that could lead to confusion. Good to hear it won’t.

        • John says:

          You should use the names as written in the MRZ of the passport, however if you just omit the umlaut (i.e. the extra E) that is fine too.

          For travel to certain countries it is more important that the name in the ticket matches the name in your visa / ETA / ESTA etc. Although currently the UK does not check ETAs at check-in or immigration (leaving it up to the airline to enforce) but in the future they could be linked.

      • Harry says:

        I am Harry. That’s on my birth certificate. I have lost count of how often I have asked, “What’s that short for?”

    • Lumma says:

      I don’t see what the issue is here? Surely you just use your legal name in these instances. If you name your daughter Elizabeth, how do you know what she’ll be known as as an adult?

      • Novice says:

        When parents choose awful names then they should be made to pay to change them. I hated my given name so on 16 birthday, I asked my parents to legally change everything to the name I chose for myself. At first, in school and in family, it was a case of everyone using my old name but I never answered to it. I knew that if I didn’t stay true to my new name then nobody will ever use it how I wanted. Let’s just say, I am a stubborn and determined person that it didn’t take long for everyone to forget my old name.

        • cin4 says:

          But it’s free? What are you on about?

          • Novice says:

            It is not free. To get it legally changed, your first name. The lawyers charge a few hundreds at least. Because I had to have all my documents updated with new name and they had to write up a legal document which I show if my birth certificate is ever needed to be shown. A person cannot change the name on original birth certificate.

          • John says:

            In England and Wales you do not need anything other than a free deed poll to do what you wanted to have done.

          • cin4 says:

            Novice. You are completely wrong. It’s free. This information is all freely available on the internet and has been for years.

            Why on earth would you involve a lawyer?!

      • Bagoly says:

        To me that is a good reason to not name a daughter Elizabeth.
        We even considered how names get confused across (European) languages.
        E.g. the fact that Elizabeth is Spanish is Isabel is not a problem because it is effectively a different name; the fact that in German/French it is Elisabeth is a problem.

        My parents said that they thought about this, and hated shortened names.
        Then they chose Richard !!!

        • John says:

          Why is that a problem? Who cares if Germans “misspell” the English version with an S?

          If you are Italian and you plan to move to an English-speaking country don’t name your son Andrea.

          When I briefly worked in a London school there was a French boy called Anaël.

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