Airlines Roll Out Holiday Surcharges

By DAVID KOENIG
Updated 4:00 PM CST, Mon, Nov 2, 2009

TWITTER FACEBOOK

Gazimal

If you plan to travel around the upcoming holidays, prepare to pay a little more -- again.

Several of the largest U.S. airlines have increased a surcharge for travel on the busiest travel days to $20 each way, up from $10.

The surcharges apply to a large number of flights within the U.S. on more than a dozen peak days around holidays including Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's.

Delta, American, United, US Airways and Northwest all boosted their surcharge on some routes, said Tom Parsons, who runs the discount travel site Bestfares.com.

Tim Smith, spokesman for Fort Worth-based American Airlines, confirmed the higher surcharges Monday. He said that although airlines are filing the increases as a surcharge this time, "fares on those peak days have always tended to be higher. It's a matter of supply and demand.

Smith said the increases started late last week with US Airways, and "most other airlines, including American, have matched."

US Airways spokesman Morgan Durrant confirmed the higher peak-day surcharges, but he said his airline did so only "to match moves by our competitors."

Officials at Delta, which owns Northwest, and United did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Parsons, the travel Web site operator, said the increases were part of a clear trend in airline pricing.

"With airlines downsizing, fuel going up and airlines still losing money," he said, "we're going to pay more for family vacations going into 2010."

The airlines' busiest days tend to fall right before or after a major holiday -- Thanksgiving and Christmas themselves are often slow travel days.

As examples of the new $20 one-way surcharge -- it's usually folded into the price of a ticket you buy online -- Parsons cited several itineraries for Dec. 27, the Sunday after Christmas.

On that day, you'll pay a $20 each-way surcharge to take American from Dallas to Los Angeles, United from Chicago to New Orleans, Delta from New York to Albuquerque, N.M., and US Airways from Charlotte, N.C., to Orange County, Calif.
 

First Published: Nov 2, 2009 3:48 PM CST

TWITTER FACEBOOK

  • 73% furious 11
  • 13% sad 2
  • 7% bored 1
  • 7% laughing 1
  • 0% thrilled 0
  • 0% intrigued 0
processing
          No comments have been posted yet.

          You have 2000 characters left

          processing
          So My City

          You are posting in (change)

          550/550 characters

          (jpg, pngs, or gifs allowed)

          (jpg, pngs, or gifs allowed)
          *Tip: You can also post moments via email or Twitter.

          processing

          View Your Moment in

          Posted by | 1 second ago

          Don't Miss

          local_beat

          13 minutes ago

          Man Faces Trial Next Summer in Dallas Bomb Plot

          The man charged with trying to blow up a Dallas skyscraper with what he thought was a car bomb will go on trial next summer.

          Read It

          local_beat

          8 minutes ago

          Consumer Group: Trouble Remains In Toyland

          As the holiday shopping season ramps up, a consumer group releases an interactive tool along with a warning about dangerous toys.

          Read It

          blue_star

          3 hours ago

          Awaiting The Day Jerry Jones Becomes Al Davis

          Will there come a day when Jerry Jones is just as stone cold crazy as his Oakland counterpart? Is it already here?

          Read It
          Loading...
          Birthdate:
          You must be at least 13 to sign up.
          Gender:
          invalid

          By clicking the button below, I accept the terms of use and privacy policy

          Already Signed Up? Login Below.

          processing
          Here's what we're posting:

          *Only used for verification. We do not store your password.
          processing