The Morning Call (Sunday)

Still waiting for a refund on canceled Air Portugal flight

- By Christophe­r Elliott King Features Syndicate

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.

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 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/

company-contacts/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.

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