National Post

HOW TO TIP AIRLINE SCALES IN YOUR FAVOUR

WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS AT THE BAGGAGE WEIGH-IN: TURN UP THE CHARM AND APPEAL TO THE AGENT’S SPIRIT OF GENEROSITY

- Christophe­r Elliott

Airport luggage scales lie.

It’s not an uncommon allegation. And sometimes, it’s actually true. Ticket counter weights in Phoenix, Raleigh, North Carolina, and Seattle have been found to be inaccurate – errors that sometimes enrich the airline.

Baggage fees are big business. In the first three quarters of 2016, U.S. carriers collected $3.1 billion in luggage fees, an increase of roughly $ 300 million from the previous year. But the question isn’t whether airport scales are a little off, but what to do when you’re at the airport and a ticket agent announces that your bag is too heavy.

Your airline immediatel­y sees dollar signs. For example, American Airlines charges just $25 for a checked bag on a domestic flight, but the fee quadruples if your bag weighs more than 50 pounds and doubles again to $ 200 if it’s over 70 pounds. Do the airline’s costs actually multiply by that much when your bag weighs an extra pound? That’s debatable.

Passengers, on the other hand, see red. They claim that the airline has its thumb on the scale. But that’s just the start of a peculiar airport game that’s winnable if you know how to play it. “Delta and American ask you to remove enough to get it under the allotted amount,” says Rich Ruddie, who runs an online consulting firm in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. “And, of course, Southwest lets your bags fly free.”

Other airlines, though, take a hard line on overweight bags. On some dis- count carriers, ticket agents have given Ruddie an ultimatum when his bag tipped the scale at 51 pounds: Either pay their $ 55 overweight luggage fee or abandon the bag. There’s a way to avoid confrontat­ions, of course. Weigh your bag before you leave. You can either buy a stand- alone digital luggage scale such as the Weigh It (inventhelp­store. com; $ 19.95), which attaches to your handle and can be used for a variety of objects. You also can buy luggage with an integrated scale, such as Raden’s A22 ($295) which will tell you if your bag is overweight.

Or you can come prepared to offload. “I always have an empty, lightweigh­t tote in a side pocket,” says Robert Kraus, who works for a political organizati­on in Alexandria, Virginia. “Just in case.” He also offers some more unorthodox advice: “I always leave a little part of the bag, usually the wheel end facing me, on the edge of the scale,” he says. In the same vein, some travellers say that they are cut more slack when they check in curbside. The agents there, who often work for tips, are more likely to look the other way if you have a heavy bag.

Eli s a beth Herbert, a counter agent for Alaska Airlines in Spokane, Washington, says arguing with an employee is often an act of futility. “I’ve had people argue with me saying our scales must be off,” she says. “I’ve noticed most of the time the bags are only overweight by two to three pounds.” She suggests that travellers leave themselves some wiggle room to allow for small discrepanc­ies.

One of the most egregious luggage- fee cases that has crossed my desk was Janet Mosher’s. When she flew from Salzburg, Austria, to Frankfurt, Germany, on Austrian Airlines, a ticket agent tagged her checked bag and sent it along the conveyor belt. But her carry- on bag was deemed overweight.“I could easily have met Austrian’s weight requiremen­ts by placing items from my carry-on in my checked bag, which was well below the airline’s weight limit,” recalls Mosher, a retired teacher from Alexandria, Virginia.

The agent offered her three choices: remove and discard items from her bag to reduce the weight, pay a 75 euro overweight luggage charge or transfer i tems from her overweight carryon to another passenger’s bag, which was still on the belt and about to be checked.

It’s one thing for an airline to simply cover the cost of transporti­ng your excess poundage, but the fee structure makes charging for overweight baggage look like the money grab that it is. I contacted Austrian Airlines on her behalf and it refunded the 75 euros as a goodwill gesture. And if all else fails? “I turn up the charm and appeal to the agent’s spirit of generosity,” says Nick Bratton, who works for a non- profit organizati­on in Anchorage. It’s a strategy that’s effective when you’re a pound or less overweight and you can find a compelling reason for the agent to look the other way - it’s a return flight or you’ve packed a gift for an elderly relative.

“This approach has been successful for me more often than not,” Bratton says. “But I don’t recommend it as much as planning ahead.”

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