Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

United, American begin selling cheaper economy-class fares

- By David Koenig

DALLAS >> American and United have started selling cheaper “basic economy” fares as they battle discount airlines for the most budgetcons­cious travelers.

American announced early Tuesday that it began selling the new fares for flights starting March 1 on 10 different routes from its hub airports in Dallas, Miami, Philadelph­ia and Charlotte, North Carolina.

United followed suit later in the day, posting reduced fares on some flights from Minneapoli­s to seven of its hub cities including New York, Chicago and Los Angeles for travel starting April 18.

Basic economy fares come with severe restrictio­ns. Buyers can’t pick a seat when they buy the ticket, they’re in the last group to board, and they can only carry a small item that fits under their seat. With a few exceptions, they must pay extra to check a wheeled bag that other economy-class travelers can put in the overhead bin. But the fares are cheaper. The savings over a regular economy ticket appear to range from about $24 to $40 for a round-trip ticket on American and United. For example, on two random early-March itinerarie­s between Dallas and Baltimore, economy tickets were listed on American’s website at $249 and $309. Those same trips were priced at $209 and $269 on basic economy.

Even on the routes where American sells the new fares, they are usually available only on a small number of flights — sometimes one or two a day — and on some days, none at all.

Bargain hunters will see more basic-economy options when searching oneway flights, rather than round trips, because American will not allow flyers to buy a round trip that combines the new cheaper fare on one leg with a regular economy fare on the other. On one-way flights, the price break can be as little as $12.

American, the world’s biggest airline, said it will eventually add basic-economy fares on other routes.

The United offering is even more limited — it only appears on some flights between Minneapoli­s and seven United hubs around the country.

United said it started small to ensure a smooth rollout, but plans to expand the idea to the rest of the U.S., the Caribbean and the closest destinatio­ns in Latin America.

Basic economy fares were introduced by Delta Air Lines several years ago in response to growing competitio­n from discounter Spirit Airlines.

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