The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

We had to sit apart on our long-haul flight

- READER CHAMPION GILL CHARLTON

QMy wife and I recently travelled to India with Saga Holidays. The package tour included return economy flights to Delhi with Virgin Atlantic.

We elected to upgrade our flights to Premium Economy but were not able to pre-book seats because the airline’s six-character PNR booking reference covered the whole group.

At Virgin Atlantic’s desk at Heathrow, we discovered we had been allocated seats several rows apart, a situation which could not be resolved on board.

We contacted Saga about the matter from India and, to its credit, it managed to seat us together for the return flight.

Please can you find out why this situation happens, given that we share a surname? We have asked Saga but, as yet, have received no response.

This is an urgent concern as we are travelling to Japan on another Saga tour next month and we really don’t want to sit apart for 13 hours.

– Reg Pengelly

ATour operators offering escorted group tours will usually make a block booking of seats with an airline to cover the number of customers they expect on the tour. These “inclusive tour” fares for group travel are heavily discounted and often give the tour operator flexibilit­y over name changes and the ability to hand back unsold seats at a later date.

The problem with such fares is that the airline does not generate individual PNR codes so customers cannot reserve specific seats, nor can they check-in when online booking opens 24 hours before departure.

I asked Saga Holidays if such problems could be resolved in advance, as surely it should have control over seat allocation within its block booking. Unfortunat­ely, it turns out they don’t. Saga says that while it can submit seat requests, these are generally assigned by the airline at check-in at its discretion. When the flight is very busy, a couple may indeed be seated apart, especially in the small premium economy cabin which is often fully-booked.

“In some instances, it can be possible for us to request specific seating requiremen­ts,” said a Saga spokespers­on. “This is managed on a case-by-case basis by the airlines upon request of the customer at time of booking and can lead to a charge.”

Saga has contacted British Airways, which is operating your flights to Japan, and it assures me that you are indeed sitting together.

Customers can, of course, buy their own flights but in doing so may forfeit the financial protection which applies to package holidays under the Package Travel Regulation­s.

If you are on a group tour and want a particular seat, it is best to turn up as early as you can, ideally three or more hours before departure if flying longhaul, when there may still be some seat choice available.

 ?? ?? i A passenger to India: reader Reg Pengelly sat rows away from his wife on a flight to Delhi because their seats had been block-booked
i A passenger to India: reader Reg Pengelly sat rows away from his wife on a flight to Delhi because their seats had been block-booked
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