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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 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 did a dummy booking for London Heathrow to San Francisco for March 2026.

As you can see below, 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 £125 per person each-way – a total of £500 return for two.  Bargain.

British Airways seat selection 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?

Things have gone backwards in terms of notification since we last highlighted this issue. Back then, the seat selection page showed a clickable link to the terms and conditions next to the pricing data – not ideal, but probably acceptable.

With the new website, you need to scroll right to the bottom of the seatmap – which you probably wouldn’t do, since most people prefer to sit near the front – before you get to this:

British Airways seat reservation fee refunds

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 £500 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. According to the T&C:

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 in order to be together but – due to the upgrade – you were separated. You do get a refund if you 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 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. It only looks 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 denying EC261 compensation.

Until someone does that, British Airways will carry on extracting 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.

Comments (99)

  • JDB says:

    On the analysis offered re fairness of not refunding seat reservation fees, wouldn’t that (if correct) apply also to the cost any non refundable flight, hotel etc? Note also that the quotes from gov.uk refer to deposits/advance payments (i.e. payments on account) not when you purchase the services in full with immediate payment required. Doesn’t necessarily mean it’s fair, but that’s not your winning argument.

    • Alex G says:

      That’s the much bigger issue, JDB.

      Cancelling flights and getting a refund is a very small portion of pax who have bought fully flexible tickets or have got a redemption flight.

      Lots of flights are full, and prices often are cheapest when booked far in advance. Someone should be able to cancel a non refundable flight and get a full refund (less a reasonable admin fee) if the airline can resell the ticket. The airline could actually profit by reselling at a higher price. That would be fair.

  • Sapporosushi says:

    Sam S
    A lot of airlines now have separate fees for seat selection, BA are not alone. And they “get away with it” because people do pay the fees.

  • Stuart says:

    To answer the question in the title: Greed.
    But JDB will be along to defend BA doing this and that customers have no right to complain since: business = always right, customer = always wrong.

  • Tristophe says:

    It’s scandalous that they make you pay for business seat selection in the first place, but what makes it worse is their customer service.

    I paid for a seat on the old club world as I need to sleep on the way back, they’ve now swapped the plane so it’s Club Suites – I asked for a refund as I wouldn’t ever pay for a specific seat on Club Suites & they’re refusing to even admit it’s a different plane despite the fact I have confirmation I paid for a backward facing seat & the new plane only has forward facing.

    As far as they’re concerned I paid for a seat number, not a specific seat, so as long as the seat number is the same I can’t get a refund. It’s infuriating that I’ve paid BA £100 for nothing

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      They don’t make you pay!

      People without status are offered the option to pay.

      Not the same thing at all.

      • Kuestrian says:

        I fear you may be missing the point deliberately as OP is correct. If you wish to select a seat before check-in without status you have to pay.

        Business seat assignment is free, but that is not what is being argued here.

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          I’m not missing the point at all.

          The fee is voluntary! You seem to be missing that point.

          • Tristophe says:

            I mean, did you think my point was that BA forced me to select a seat & therefore pay?

            I’ll make it really clear, it’s scandalous that when you pay thousands to fly business BA then make you pay if you want a specific seat, & then refuse to refund when they change that seat (despite their T&Cs being clear that they should).

            I shall endeavour to be so specific going forward that no one could possibly misunderstand.

          • Kuestrian says:

            So I can select a seat at time of booking without status for free?! Great! Tell me how!

          • JDB says:

            @Tristophe – the issue is that you (presumably) deliberately purchased an unbundled fare that didn’t include seat selection saving yourself a larger sum of money than your subsequent voluntary choice to pay for seat selection.

            You appeared to be happy with that until BA changed the aircraft from old CW to suites whilst quite reasonably preserving your seat number. Your disappointment that you now have a paid forward facing individual suite seat vs a rear facing one and the position that you wouldn’t have paid to pre-book a CS seat are separate issues.

          • Tristophe says:

            @JDB, given I said I thought charging for seat selection was outrageous, I would not say I was happy to do so. I did however obviously decide it was worth it in this case.

            I also explicitly called out the refund of the separate issue, as I started it by saying ‘what makes it worse’

            I think the fairness on the refund of the seat charge is dependent on whether you think you’re paying for a seat number, or a specific seat. A potentially shocking revalation is, I actually have no specific affinity for the seat number 4K, I did however deliberately choose a backward facing seat at the very rear of the cabin, I’m genuinely unsure how anyone can then say a forward facing seat towards the front of the cabin is the same seat I paid for, despite the seat number remaining the same. BA’s T&Cs say if ‘we change your seat (not seat number) & you’re not happy you can request a refund’. To me it’s clear the seat has changed.

  • Tim says:

    the CAA is a useless regulator. It should have challenged this decades ago

    • JDB says:

      It’s not within the remit of the CAA. Parliament could specifically legislate which is unlikely, otherwise It’s for courts to determine whether a contract term is unfair in the specific circumstances of a case put before it.

      • Tim says:

        The 1982 Civil Aviation Act defines the CAA’s remit as:

        “”to secure that British airlines provide services which satisfy all substantial
        categories of public demand …., at the lowest possible charge consistent with
        1
        a high standard of safety in operating the services and an economic return to
        efficient operators on the sums invested in providing the services and with
        securing the sound development of the civil air transport industry in the UK;
        and to further the reasonable interests of users of air transport services””

        Choosing not to act in the interests of the consumer is a choice and one for which the CAA can and should be criticised

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      I used to work for a regulator.

      They can only operate within the law and regulations,

      We were often asked to “Do something about x” yet we couldn’t

      When we approached our sponsoring department to change the regulations they looked at it and said “no”

    • ADS says:

      the CAA won’t stop LCCs deliberately splitting up family groups

      splitting up family groups means that in the case of an emergency exit – you will search for your family instead of getting out of the aircraft – this has been demonstrated by proper aeronautical studies

      splitting up family groups is therefore a safety issue

      and the CAA won’t act – they are feeble

  • paul says:

    If you think BA is bad you should look at cruise companies (Princess in this case)

    Earlier this year, several passengers missed their Transatlantic cruise due to the overturned plane at a Canadian airport closing it down.

    Not only did those passengers lose the price of their cruise but they also lost the money paid on drinks packages purchased pre-cruise. That would have been 14 x £80 x 2 in a cabin, so over £2,200.

    Had they waited to purchase on the ship (a $5/day surcharge) they wouldn’t have lost the money as they didn’t reach to the ship.

    It’s a scandal. But cruise lines do get away with an awful lot under their foreign registrations.

    • AndrewT says:

      That is a completely different situation, because they would have simply included the drinks package in their travel insurance cancellation claim.

      • AndrewT says:

        Sorry not cancellation, but you know what I mean.

        • paul says:

          It’s not different at all – seat bookings and prepaid drinks are both examples of a service not provided and therefore no financial loss to the provider.

          There is an argument where they claim they couldn’t resell the item so have a loss.

          But, if the passenger had not pre-paid then the business would not have got that revenue anyway.

          It’s the fact that a customer is wrongly penalised for planning ahead.

  • Andrew says:

    You quote the government stating that a business is entitled to keep an amount to cover their “costs already incurred or loss of profit”. Given that a seat reservation fee is effectively 100% profit the advice would seem to suggest BA are doing nothing wrong?

  • Mrs Brown says:

    I’ve noticed you can no longer pay for seats with Avios which is annoying, even though the conversion value was often poor, it made it less painful forking out silly money for a seat. I assume this is part of the BA website upgrades. Anyone have insight if the option to reserve seats using avios will be renabled soon?

    • acewoking says:

      I managed this on a BA flight to Japan on 19th August – paying with Avios wasn’t great value but it meant I was saving actual cash.

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