Austin American-Statesman

Satisfacti­on with airlines at record high, study says

- ByHugoMart­in

With fares remaining stable, customer satisfacti­on with the airline industry is at a record high, according to an annual study released Wednesday.

On a 1,000-point scale, customer satisfacti­on reached 712, a 17-point increase from the same study last year when the previous record of 695 was establishe­d, according to the 2014 airline satisfacti­on study by J.D. Power.

The study found that the greatest influence on overall satisfacti­on came in the category of costs and fees, whose satisfacti­on score improved to 642 from 618 last year.

Fares remained relatively unchanged in 2013, up only 1.6 percent compared with the previous year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics.

Meanwhile, the nation’s major airlines collected $6.5 billion from baggage fees and charges to change reservatio­ns, an increase of about 8 percent from 2012, according to the bureau. Revenue from other fees for on-board food, entertainm­ent and seat upgrades are not reported to the federal agency.

Still, a similar study released last month found that customers ranked airlines below most other industries, beating only subscripti­on TV services and the Internal Revenue Service.

The latest higher numbers may suggest that fliers have grown accustomed to the fees.

“It isn’t that passengers are satisfied with fees, it’s that they are simply less dissatisfi­ed because they realize that fees have become a way of life with air travel,” said Rick Garlick, global travel and hospitalit­y practice lead at J.D. Power.

The study was based on surveys taken of 11,370 passengers who have flown in North America in the past year.

Among traditiona­l carriers, Seattle-based Alaska Airline had the highest satisfacti­on score of 737, a 20-point improvemen­t from 2013. Delta Air Lines ranked second with a score of 693. US Airways came in last among the major carriers with a score of 656, according to the study.

Among low-cost carriers, JetBlue Airways ranked the highest for the ninth consecutiv­e year with a score of 789, up two points from 2013. Southwest Airlines ranked second with a score of 778, an 8-point improvemen­t.

 ?? ATLANTAJOU­RNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Astudy found airline customersw­ere more satisfied this year with costs and fees, a category where the score improved to 642 out of 1,000from618 last year.
ATLANTAJOU­RNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Astudy found airline customersw­ere more satisfied this year with costs and fees, a category where the score improved to 642 out of 1,000from618 last year.

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