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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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  • Nick says:

    For the record, BA wouldn’t even need it to be changed… recognised/obvious diminutives or contractions are accepted as standard. APIS would need to be correct but doesn’t have to exactly match ticket name, even for the US.

    For background, the three-character limit is an IATA rule and occasional audits are carried out to ensure compliance (the limit demotes corrections vs changes), and airlines that have failed one tend to be stricter. Pragmatically, just just accepting it never even shows up in an audit, so is easier for airlines where fraud isn’t common. Non-IATA airlines set their own policies, which may or may not be similar.

    • Bagoly says:

      Although whether a diminutive is obvious varies by culture.
      Even within language – is Peggy for Margaret known in USA and India?
      How many Brits would recognise Manyusya as a (Russian) diminutive of Maria?

      Fascinating about the IATA angle.

  • JimmyJimmy says:

    I had the same problem many years ago, in error using Jim rather than James. I called airline -they said no that’s 4 letters, removing “”im” adding “ames”,
    Can’t you keep the “m” I replied and change 3” I added
    “Oh yeah” that’s ok.
    Success!!

  • Al_Wiltshire says:

    I made a stupid mistake when booking a room at a Crowne Plaza last month. Being in a hurry, I managed to book it for today’s date rather than the one I needed it for. The rate was cancellable up until the day of arrival, but because I booked the wrong date, I could no longer cancel.
    I rang the hotel right away, pleaded my case, and they refused. They said I’d booked a room, my card had been charged, and they wouldn’t move it to a different day.
    I could probably have got a refund if I’d kicked up a fuss on Twitter or emailed the CEO, but in the end I decided it was easier to conclude my regular business with that hotel, and take it to one of the many others at Heathrow.

    • Mark says:

      And that is where stupid policies hurt business. Their loss.

    • Crafty says:

      I’ve only ever had hotels from the major chains be understanding and helpful in such a situation. Now you probably won’t stay at that hotel for life, and possibly none in the Crowne Plaza brand. It’s astonishingly bad business decision making.

    • John says:

      Why is the actual hotel a secret?

  • Pat says:

    On the topic of Skytrax. Can we get an article explaining who’s behind it, why it’s a sole trader etc. A bit of digging and explaining on them would be so appreciated.

    • Rob says:

      I’d like to know myself!

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      IMHO it’s a totally unreliable company with zero credibility.

      Giving an airline a 5* rating for a seat that no passengers had ever sat in was just ridiculous.

      As for pay to play …

  • No longer Entitled says:

    I’m not one for posting links, but this is exactly what Alex(ander) had to deal with and it’s both very funny and true:

    https://youtu.be/VPWJp05ge5g?si=dVPPDoToFsaFSQfB

    P.S. It’s also without any rude words. Very much Nate’s calling card. Hopefully it makes someone smile.

  • G says:

    Oh! and HEAVENS FORBID you inputs your QA number (the website does it automatically and wont let you change it sometimes) instead of your preferred partner airline. You will have to open a case and plead with them for MONTHS for them to fix it and they will avoid doing it at all cost, trying to tire you. This has happened to me 3 times now over a year and they will not fix it.

    Great for Qsuites for customer service is really lacking

    • John says:

      Fool me once etc.

      Just make sure you are logged out and clear cookies before booking

  • masaccio says:

    The pedants and moaners are out in force today. I suggest you read “Falsehoods Programmers Believe About Names” before you make assumptions about how names work.

    • John says:

      Tell IATA that

      • memesweeper says:

        and Amadeus, Sabre etc

        Tragically old fashioned back ends crafted by Americans with cultural assumptions baked into the code.

  • Paul says:

    Just off a QR flight in last hour. Absolutely faultless in every respect.

    But they cannot handle complaints or issues as you discovered. It because they have no authority to act outwith the book and wobetide anyone who does. I had a bag damaged 2 years ago and it took months to resolve.

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

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