Still waiting for a refund on canceled Air Portugal flight
A: TAP Air Portugal should have refunded your flights promptly since it canceled them. But like several airlines during the pandemic, it didn’t. Instead, it offered a ticket credit, which EU regulators eventually said was not allowed.
Under existing EU rules, an airline must offer either a full refund or a credit for a canceled flight, no matter the reason for the cancellation.
The correspondence between you, TAP Air Portugal and Expedia is pretty confusing. It looks like Expedia believed TAP had resolved your case because you had asked TAP Air Portugal directly for a refund, so Expedia closed your case. And, as
Q: In the summer of 2019, I booked seven round-trip tickets from Miami to Budapest on TAP
Air Portugal through Expedia. I planned to fly to Europe the following spring with my husband, my two daughters, my mother and my two cousins. In March of 2020, a week or so before our scheduled departure, TAP Air Portugal canceled our flight because of COVID-19.
I waited a few months before doing anything, since I got an automated email about flight credit.
And who knew when the world would open up again? Eventually, time passed, life circumstances changed and I knew that the seven of us would not be able to take that trip to Budapest anytime in the near future. So I began the process of trying to get a refund. It’s been a year since I asked for a refund, and there’s still no refund from either Expedia or TAP Air Portugal. When I try to check my refund process, it either doesn’t have anything in the system or still shows a credit. I am exhausted from having to go back and forth between the two. Anything you can do to help me would be so much appreciated.
— Sandra Einhorn,
Hollywood, Fla.
is so often the case, no one was willing to take responsibility for your missing refund.
You might have asked for your money back a little sooner. It looks as if you waited several months to start the process. The longer you wait, the harder it becomes to get your money back. That’s just a general rule when it comes to my consumer advocacy. Waiting only benefits the company that already has your money.
You also could have reached out to executives at both companies. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the customer service managers at Expedia on my consumer advocacy site at elliott.org/companycontacts/expedia-customer-service-contacts/.
I also publish the executive contacts for TAP
Air Portugal at elliott. org/company-contacts/ tap-air-portugal/.
I contacted Expedia on your behalf. It reached out to TAP Air Portugal, which refunded your ticket. Expedia also sent you a
$50 certificate by way of apology.
Christopher Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organization that helps consumers resolve their problems. Elliott’s latest book is “How To Be The World’s Smartest Traveler” (National Geographic). Contact him at elliott.org/ help or chriselliott.org.