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Airline Baggage Policy For Code-Share Flights
Hello,
This thread was started as follows: ================================================================== Lufthansa NOT Following Originating Airline Bike Policy? I just came back from a tour to Mallorca and a couple of the other participants said that on a prior tour that Lufthansa (Austrian, Swiss, etc.) failed to follow their originating (U.S.) airlines baggage policy and instead charged Lufthansa's egregious $500/bike for the return part of the trip. I have a tour booked through United but returns via Austrian/Lufthansa at the end of September and am wondering is If I will also run into this issue and if there is anything that I can do to prevent/charge back if this happens to me. Thanks, Steve ================================================================= but the moderator deleted it in error as spam and couldn't recover it. So after doing a bit of research II am re-posting it with a slightly different title. |
same thing happened in Japan. My bike and I flew Alaska from PDX to LAX, and JAL from LAX-tokyo.
There was no charge because I'm MVP Gold with Alaska. Home bound was a different story and they charged $$$. When I asked why, it was because exactly like you described. |
1 Attachment(s)
This appears to be a definitive answer:
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-14/section-399.87 § 399.87 Baggage allowances and fees.For passengers whose ultimate ticketed origin or destination is a U.S. point, U.S. and foreign carriers must apply the baggage allowances and fees that apply at the beginning of a passenger's itinerary throughout his or her entire itinerary. In the case of code-share flights that form part of an itinerary whose ultimate ticketed origin or destination is a U.S. point, U.S. and foreign carriers must apply the baggage allowances and fees of the marketing carrier throughout the itinerary to the extent that they differ from those of any operating carrier.[Doc. No. DOT-OST-2010-0140, [url=https://www.federalregister.gov/citation/76-FR-23167]76 FR 23167, Apr. 25, 2011] Here is an airline industry practices website and an attached document: https://www.iata.org/en/programs/ops...age/standards/ It looks like this pretty much answers the question with bikes/baggage policy on code-share flights. You might want to save this for reference. |
Originally Posted by Robvolz
(Post 23258649)
same thing happened in Japan. My bike and I flew Alaska from PDX to LAX, and JAL from LAX-tokyo.
There was no charge because I'm MVP Gold with Alaska. Home bound was a different story and they charged $$$. When I asked why, it was because exactly like you described. |
Tips for traveling on codeshare flights
but a return flight is a separate flight, and in your case lufthansa/austria is the originating carrier, and will charge for baggage accordingly. |
Originally Posted by saddlesores
(Post 23258962)
...but a return flight is a separate flight, and in your case lufthansa/austria is the originating carrier, and will charge for baggage accordingly.
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Airlines being the weasels that they are, will probably point out that a bicycle is not "baggage" as such but rather a "special item", that out of the goodness of their hearts they let us check in as baggage.
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Originally Posted by Steve_sr
(Post 23258670)
This appears to be a definitive answer:
... It looks like this pretty much answers the question with bikes/baggage policy on code-share flights. You might want to save this for reference. While I haven't had many issues with different baggage fees on inbound vs. outbound flights - this is useful information to have and save away. Hopefully it forestalls an issue at check-in but if not it becomes part of a more official letter to customer service. I've found that often airline personnel don't always know their own carrier rules (let alone special rules for US origin/destination) and as often as not I think that has worked in my favor. I am polite and patient though if a charge seems high I will also bring it up. For example, flying from New Zealand to India I believe the airline policy was to charge by the kilo but they somehow found an exception for "sports equipment" that turned it into a nominal charge. I had what seemed like a very high charge flying from Indonesia to Timor Leste until I realized the price quoted was in Indonesian Rupiah so what I heard as "330" was really "330,000 Rupiah" or about US $20. |
Originally Posted by Steve_sr
(Post 23259601)
That's not what CFR399.87 above states. From my reading it includes the ENTIRE itinerary booked at the same time which includes the return flight.
but i'm not a lawyer, and would feel foolish arguing the meaning of "is" in court. i hope it works out for you, and wish you the best. but be prepared. good luck! |
Originally Posted by saddlesores
(Post 23259952)
but i'm not a lawyer, and would feel foolish arguing the meaning of "is" in court. i hope it works out for you, and wish you the best. but be prepared.
good luck! |
Latest update... I went on a second European tour with a single purchased itinerary on United. This time the return flight from Salzburg originated on Austrian/Lufthansa (United's code-share partner). First they claimed that I needed a "reservation" for a properly packed bike box whereas United doesn't. After about 30-45 minutes multiple phone calls and a lot of hemming and hawing (slow day at the airport) they finally decided that I could put the bike on the plane. However, they decided that I needed to pay an arbitrary 200 euro "excess baggage" fee. Not wanting to leave my bike in Salzburg I reluctantly paid the fee.
I am currently disputing the charge through my credit card. We'll see what happens. |
Sounds like code-share flights policy can be summed up in two words: "Cha" and "ching!"
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