The National - News

Etihad responds to ‘mis-sold’ ticket claim

▶ Businessma­n says he bought a first-class ticket online but got a business-class seat

- GILLIAN DUNCAN

An Etihad customer who bought a ticket advertised as first class but was issued a business-class seat instead is hoping the airline will honour the original sale.

Businessma­n Lakhi Ramchandan­i, from India, bought what was advertised as a firstclass ticket on Etihad’s website last month for a flight from Mumbai to New York in January. But after debiting his card, Etihad issued him a business-class ticket.

Armed with a screenshot of his booking summary, taken before he paid for the ticket, he got in touch with Etihad for an explanatio­n.

He said the representa­tive told him the problem stemmed from an online glitch, and the ticket he was issued with was correct for the price he paid.

Mr Ramchandan­i said the Etihad employee told him the airline would honour the ticket he bought. But the airline has since changed course and now wants him to pay to upgrade his seat to first class.

“The agent of Etihad confirmed to me that very day that it was an error on their part,” he said. “But ever since I started pursuing Etihad for my rightful claim, per the offer, as I paid for first class and the money was deducted, they say they ‘cannot entertain my request for an upgrade’, which is absurd. I am not requesting an upgrade.”

While he was on the phone to the Etihad employee, he bought another ticket online to test whether it was in fact the result of an online error.

He was issued with another business-class ticket, despite again paying for a first-class seat. That ticket, at the same price, has since been cancelled by the airline with Mr Ramchandan­i’s agreement.

He accepts the price he paid for the first-class return ticket is low, at about Dh10,000, but he feels he should not have to pay for Etihad’s error.

“I did some research and in 2014 there was an Etihad system glitch where it issued tickets from New York to Abu Dhabi at $187 (Dh690) and they honoured all of those,” said Mr Ramchandan­i, who has lived in the UAE for the past 35 years.

An Etihad spokespers­on said it had been in contact with Mr Ramchandan­i throughout this period, advising him about his options for both tickets he had bought.

“He had purchased two tickets online for the same travel and the ticket which required travel on a codeshare partner airline was priced higher and that was fully refunded on the same day.

“Both tickets were correctly priced for the business-class cabin they were confirmed in.

“We have informed Mr Ramchandan­i that, if these were not the tickets he intended to purchase, he has the option either to obtain a full refund or pay the fare difference to upgrade the sectors to first class.

“Therefore we are not in a position to provide the compliment­ary upgrade to first class and refute the suggestion that he was advised that his ticket would be honoured in first class.

“We look forward to resolving the matter of the second ticket with Mr Ramchandan­i at the earliest opportunit­y.”

Experts said Etihad is under no obligation to issue Mr Ramchandan­i with a first-class ticket for the price he paid.

“My view is that unless he has written proof that he was getting first-class flights, the airline is not obliged to honour the provisiona­l offer on screen,” said Keren Bobker, an independen­t financial adviser and a columnist for The National.

Analysts also said airlines are not duty bound to honour flawed pricing.

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