Airline industryOur agreed KLM flight ticket price took off, disappeared...

Our agreed KLM flight ticket price took off, disappeared and cost us £118

-

I booked a one-way flight for my family from Amsterdam to Bristol with KLM Cityhopper. The agreed fares were £71.30 each, including four seat reservations (£37.60). I paid for a hold bag (£25.70), bringing the total to £310.90.

A few days later, I checked my bank statement and noticed I had been charged £428.90, a difference of £118. The “My Trip” section of the KLM website still had the original amount on it, so I queried it. After an hour to-ing and fro-ing, I was advised to submit an online complaint; however, this was dismissed within 24 hours.

It told me the higher price was due to “dynamic pricing”. It said the fare price had increased and thus three tickets are now £92.90, instead of £71.30, and the other, £86.90 instead of £71.30.

I am familiar with dynamic pricing and, while it is annoying, I accept it is allowed. The key thing, though, is that the altered price was agreed before the transaction. We had agreed an amount, I submitted my card details, and then KLM charged more without telling me. By KLM’s logic, I would have no comeback even if they had decided to “dynamically’ increase the price by £10,000.

KLM won’t budge on the £118. We only chose it because it was cheaper. This makes them more expensive, and looks as if it was just hoping I wouldn’t notice.

RB, Burnham-on-Sea

When you complained to KLM about being overcharged, you were given short shrift. Its customer service told you: “Fares are dynamic in nature, and not guaranteed.”

It says that prices could change, based on factors such as seat availability or the number of passengers trying to book a particular fare at the same time. It added: “Fares may increase or decrease as per the availability.”

However, while dynamic pricing affects the prices on its website (in other words, if you see a price for a flight to London on a Monday, it is not guaranteed it will be the same price on the Friday after), if you agree a price for the transaction – that is the price for the ticket – it should not change.

When I contacted KLM, it confirmed there had been a mistake here. It says: “After conducting a thorough investigation, we have found that the passenger was previously quoted a lower fare online. We have reached out to RB to offer our apologies and a refund of £118.”

We welcome letters but cannot answer individually. Email us at [email protected] or write to Consumer Champions, Money, the Guardian, 90 York Way, London N1 9GU. Please include a daytime phone number. Submission and publication of all letters is subject to our terms and conditions

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Latest news

Automatically enrol young staff into workplace pension schemes, says IFS

Employees as young as 16 should be automatically enroled...

Winter fuel: 780,000 UK pensioners entitled to payment will lose it

About 780,000 pensioners who need the winter fuel payment...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x