When The Cost Of Airfare Just Doesn’t Make Sense…

When The Cost Of Airfare Just Doesn’t Make Sense…

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One of the things that frustrates consumers most about airlines is pricing. Airfare has gone way, way up over the past few years, and that’s perfectly justifiable, despite decreasing oil prices. The cost of airfare is based on supply and demand, and not based on the cost of providing it.

That’s why we’ve gone from seeing an industry which was losing billions of dollars, to one which is doing quite well. Between some airlines going out of business, consolidation, the lower price of oil, and high demand, airlines have never had it this good.

But I think the biggest point of frustration for consumers isn’t the cost of airfare as such, but more so the pricing algorithm. There aren’t many other industries where two people are buying exactly the same product but getting exponentially different pricing. And there’s no publicly known rhyme or reason, either. In other words, you never know for sure if the cost of a seat on a given flight will go up or down as the departure date approaches.

Emirates-Economy

And it goes beyond that. What’s confusing isn’t just the cost of travel between two given city pairs, but also the relative pricing between city pairs. As a consumer, how am I supposed to rationalize that a ticket from San Diego to Los Angeles costs $411:

American-Fare-2

While a ticket between San Diego and Chicago, via Los Angeles (on exactly the same flight) costs almost $100 less:

American-Fare-1

You’re literally paying ~$95 less for a journey which is almost 20x as far.

So my point in saying all of the above is that airfare pricing is confusing, but I get it. Not that I necessarily agree with it, but I get the realities of how it works.

But here’s one thing I don’t get, something which I don’t see quite as often as the above. I needed to fly from Chicago to Washington today, and the fares were outrageous — over a dollar per mile, in both economy and first class. The puzzling part? Refundable economy class was more than 50% more expensive than refundable first class:

American-Fare-3

It’s not unusual to see discounted, non-refundable first class be cheaper than full fare, refundable economy, but it’s cases like the above where you can’t help but stop, shake your head, and wonder if this is really the best system for airlines to charge airfare.

And I suppose it is, because based on my schedule and the options, I had no choice but to pull the trigger…

Conversations (8)
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  1. AlexS Diamond

    As maddening as it is, the idiotic pricing has allowed me to almost fly exclusively in F/J for my transcon flights over the past year. When F is just $100 more than Y before baggage and other bull---- fees, my clients haven't had any issue with me flying that way (I include both my ticket & a screen shot of the Y fare with fees). Even better is that some airlines F fares are fully refundable/no change fees, which ultimately makes them even less expensive than Y.

  2. Ivan Y Diamond

    @ Lucky -- did you fly through Europe or North Asia? ;)))

    Anytime refundable Y costs more than refundable J/F, it's whack.

  3. Steve Case New Member

    for this 100 mile trip, you can take the greyhound for $20.50 and no TSA.

  4. dmodemd Guest

    Agree with Qasr abaove, most business flyers aren't allowed to buy first class, and their travel portals block them from that, so the best way to extract as much as possible from them is to jack up refundable economy. Airlines know how to work the backwards travel policies now.

  5. Stvr Guest

    what about miles?

    One Dollar at a Time?

  6. James Guest

    I can understand the reasoning behind the SAN --> LAX fare. You basically have a captive market since nearly all the flights from SAN are SkyTeam or OneWorld shuttling to one of their hubs. There's also a likely wink and nod agreement among the majors flying from SAN to not attempt to undercut each other's pricing by too much.

    Flying from LAX has many more flights, operated by many more carriers, going to many...

    I can understand the reasoning behind the SAN --> LAX fare. You basically have a captive market since nearly all the flights from SAN are SkyTeam or OneWorld shuttling to one of their hubs. There's also a likely wink and nod agreement among the majors flying from SAN to not attempt to undercut each other's pricing by too much.

    Flying from LAX has many more flights, operated by many more carriers, going to many more places. So the competition is greater, ergo prices will be lower. Plus AA has 10 LAX --> ORD vs. 8 SAN --> LAx flights a day so if you want to look at it from a sheer capacity standpoint, LAX --> ORD planes will be larger bigger and they fly the route more often (i.e. more seats --> more supply = less scarcity and lower prices). As with all algorithms and models, you can get some wonky results when you push them to the outer limits of their capacity (leading to peculiar outputs like higher prices for refundable economy vs. first). But, generally, if you think through the inputs from an economic standpoint, the pricing models usually make sense.

  7. qasr New Member

    This happens often, close to departure. Many corporate fliers can't book first class and they have to fly, so the margin for the airline is even higher.

  8. David Linsey Guest

    Maybe there are just two or so seats left in economy, but first class is empty? So they jack up the economy fare to make first look like an amazing deal in comparison. This seems like a great way to fill it up at the last minute by confusing pricing - who in their right mind after seeing those fares would't book a first class ticket!

    If economy prices had stayed normal then the first class seats would probably never be filled!

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The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

AlexS Diamond

As maddening as it is, the idiotic pricing has allowed me to almost fly exclusively in F/J for my transcon flights over the past year. When F is just $100 more than Y before baggage and other bull---- fees, my clients haven't had any issue with me flying that way (I include both my ticket & a screen shot of the Y fare with fees). Even better is that some airlines F fares are fully refundable/no change fees, which ultimately makes them even less expensive than Y.

0
Ivan Y Diamond

@ Lucky -- did you fly through Europe or North Asia? ;))) Anytime refundable Y costs more than refundable J/F, it's whack.

0
Steve Case New Member

for this 100 mile trip, you can take the greyhound for $20.50 and no TSA.

0
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