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HomeBusinessCan Your Airline Sue You or Take Away Miles for Skiplagging? What...

Can Your Airline Sue You or Take Away Miles for Skiplagging? What Flyers Need to Know

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Image by Martin Winkler from Pixabay

The practice of “skipping” a flight, often referred to as Skiplagging, also known as “hidden city ticketing” or “point beyond ticketing,” is a travel strategy that involves booking a flight with the intention of disembarking at a layover city rather than continuing to the final destination.

The term “skiplagging” comes from the idea of skipping the last leg of your journey.” or “point beyond ticketing,” is planning to land at a layover city rather than the final destination. The idea of skipping the final part of your journey is where the name “skiplagging” originates.

How skiplagging works.

Find a less expensive flight: Sometimes, reserving a flight to a well-liked location will cost more than reserving a flight with a stopover at the same location. You might be able to locate a cheaper ticket that includes your chosen location as a layover because airlines frequently base travel prices on demand.

Book the flight: Even if you don’t plan to fly the final leg, you buy the ticket for the trip that has a layover at the final destination once you’ve found one.

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Disembark in the layover city: When you arrive at the layover city, you exit the aircraft without proceeding to the final destination specified on your ticket.

For example, let’s say you want to travel from City A to City C, and there’s a flight from City A to City B with a layover in City C. If the flight from City A to City B via City C is cheaper than a direct flight from City A to City C, you would book the flight from City A to City B, intending to get off the plane at City C and not continuing on to City B.

What can happen if the airlines are aware of my frequent skiplagging?

It’s important to exercise caution when utilizing skiplagging because most airlines disapprove of it and may have procedures in place to prevent it. Here are a few things to think about:

One-way tickets: If you miss a section of your one-way flight, the airline will normally cancel the remaining segments of your schedule. Using skiplagging for round-trip or multi-leg journeys is not advised.

Where does my luggage end up? Luggage that has been checked will be marked on your ticket with the final destination. Your baggage will travel to the original end destination even if you skiplag. This means that if you intend to skiplag, you should simply bring carry-on luggage.

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Accounts for regular flyers: If an airline notices a pattern of skiplagging, it may punish or suspend those accounts.

Be Aware of Return flights: The remaining flights on your reservation will be canceled if you skip any of the scheduled segments. This implies that your return flight can also be canceled if you skip the first leg of your trip.

Legal and ethical concerns: Skiplagging may violate the terms of service of some airlines, and they could potentially take legal action against frequent skiplaggers.

Skiplagging is frowned upon as many airlines disapprove of it to the point where it may result in the cancellation of miles or statuses or even a lifelong ban from the airline.

For those that what to try skiplagging, one site makes it easier for you. Check out SkipLagged. The website says, “We even show you flights the airlines don’t want you to see. Our goal is to empower consumers to use their buying power however they please.”

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