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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.

  • Panda Mick says:

    My Lufthansa miles&more account is known as Ms Panda Mick. For reasons lost in the mist of time. In 25 years LH have not permitted me to change it to Mr.

    Count yourself lucky 🙂

    • Novice says:

      I actually had a similar problem with flying blue. Name was correct but they used Ms. Which is wrong for me and I kept trying to correct it with them but after a while it just annoyed me so much I actually gave up on the loyalty program.

  • Simon Castleman says:

    I love flying with QR but their back office service is woeful. I had to change a phone number on my QAPC account for two factor authentication. It took three months and multiple emails with copies of passports photos of me etc etc. they even make banks look helpful and that takes some doing.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    My experience of the two airlines I’ve flown most in last couple of years.
    Qatar – veneer of luxury but scratch beneath the surface and basically useless and couldn’t care less about you.
    Jet2 – absolutely nothing luxurious but scratch beneath the surface and incredibly helpful.

    If there was a long-haul equivalent of Jet2 that flew the routes I do on Qatar then I’d book it even if it was more meat-and-potatoes than caviar in general flying experience. Whatever flash seat you’re sitting in, there’s nothing luxury about an experience where you’re constantly praying that nothing goes wrong because if it does all the wheels will fall off.

    • Novice says:

      Jet2 would be great if they actually controlled the amount of alcohol they let some groups consume. I know they make money out of it but in the instance of an emergency, what would happen if you had half the plane smashed and not taking anything seriously? I am totally against this idea of letting passengers get drunk or letting drunk passengers on board. And it has nothing to do with the fact that I hardly drink myself. There should be a limit. I have used Jet2 once for a return flight and it was absolutely mad the number of drunken people on board. I complained about my bad experience and they didn’t apologise despite the fact that was all I wanted.

      • The Savage Squirrel says:

        Never experienced that in numerous flights but I’ll concede it’s going to be quite destination-dependent and I am flying routes and times more aligned with families than ‘lads’ for many years now, so may avoid it more by luck than judgement.

      • cin4 says:

        Where are you flying where that’s the case?!

        • Novice says:

          I already stated I used them once for a return flight to Budapest and I don’t think I will be a repeat customer as I didn’t like the amount of alcohol consumed by passengers. Having said that I am not a regular budget airline traveller so it may be a case of not being used to those types of passengers.

          There should be a sensible alcohol limit in air; like there is on ground for driving. I know passengers are not flying the planes but they can cause problems in air and I would rather not be in an emergency situation where half the passengers don’t follow instructions and cause problems for me.

  • G says:

    Or just get your ticket issued as written per your passport? I don’t see the issue here.

    • Ironside says:

      The clue’s in the article: “…I had accidentally booked my brother’s tickets…”

      Literally no-one believes you don’t see the issue.

    • Occasional Ranter says:

      Is it too early to vote this least helpful comment of the year ?

    • JDB says:

      @G – as above, the article is about human error, but one can’t always have a ticket “written per your passport”! My tickets never are…

  • Michael says:

    I recently booked flights via flight centre with BA Qatar code share. I missed a single letter out of a long surname. I noticed it 3 months before we are due to fly.
    The airlines wouldn’t allow us to correct it. I had to to cancel and rebook with additional few hundred pounds cost.
    Robbery!

    • Novice says:

      There should be an edit tool. It is daylight robbery that airlines are allowed to charge for such small mistakes and a lot of the time it can be the phone’s fault.

    • John says:

      If you did nothing it’s likely there would have been no issue with just one character missing

  • Roger says:

    I.must have around 20 privilege accounts.
    I open a new one and within a month or two it gets “locked” and told to call customer support, who in turn can’t help.
    I’m running out of email options

  • Geoggy says:

    Did SYD-DOH-MAN in November. Just done MAN-DOH-BKK and back from Phuket in Business on Avios.

    I don’t get what the fuss is about!

    We had a cancelled flight. Awful CS. Poor onboard service where drinks just never appear – 3 call bell presses! Aircraft change with no notice and therefore unable to use Q Suite guarantee.

    Even when we did get Q suite or its little brother on the 787 at 6ft 3 I found them really cramped and couldn’t sleep as my feet and legs barely fit in the cubby hole.

    No more plans to use them again, ever.

    • HampshireHog says:

      I also find the 787 q suite cramped and claustrophobic

  • SydneySwan says:

    Last year I bought a J ticket on Asiana Sydney – Seoul – Madrid and back. Ticket was issued without the last letter of my last middle name. Emailed Sydney Asiana office with copy of passport page and received a new eticket with correct last middle name the following day. Customer service like it should be.

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

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