Boston Sunday Globe

I paid Aer Lingus for extra luggage I didn’t need. Can I get a refund?

- By Christophe­r Elliott

Q. I recently booked tickets through the Aer Lingus website. When I did, the site only listed a carry-on as included with the fare rather than both a carryon and one checked bag before final purchase.

I was confused, and I unknowingl­y added three extra checked bags, which was unnecessar­y. I overpaid Aer Lingus $449 because it included an additional checked bag for each passenger on my itinerary.

I called Aer Lingus twice on the same date of ticket purchase, and filed an online request that it return the luggage fee. I kept receiving messages that the fee was nonrefunda­ble.

I believed Aer Lingus’s online booking was very confusing and deceptive, so I also filed a complaint with the US Department of Transporta­tion. I received no further informatio­n from the DOT other than acknowledg­ment of my complaint.

I want my $449 back. Can you help me get it?

KRISTA O’BRIEN, New Haven A. Aer Lingus should have been clear about what was included in your fare. Most longer internatio­nal flights include a checked bag, so maybe it assumed everyone knew — but everyone did not know.

Your case raises several important issues. First, there’s the issue of an airline intentiona­lly making its booking interface confusing in a way that benefits it. This is most common with seat assignment­s. If you have an airline ticket, you have a seat. The airline will try to sell you a seat assignment — meaning you get to select where you sit. But it sometimes leaves you with the impression that you don’t have a seat at all. That’s a deceptive booking interface.

Did Aer Lingus have a deceptive interface? I couldn’t check because doing so would require that I buy a ticket, which I don’t need. But I believe you when you say you were confused. I don’t know if causing the confusion was intentiona­l. It might have been, and maybe that’s something for the Department of Transporta­tion to investigat­e.

The second issue is the refundabil­ity of fees. Already, the DOT says your airfare must be refundable if you cancel within 24 hours, unless you are a week or less before your trip. So why not apply the same rule to fees?

And finally, there’s the fee itself. Every plane ticket should include a seat, a checked bag, and on longer flights, something to eat and drink. And if you think the latter is a luxury, you should have been on the budget airline flight from Madrid to Buenos Aires where they tried to sell us breakfast and drinks at the end of a 13-hour flight. I’m surprised there wasn’t a riot on board.

Remember, if you can’t make progress with the lower-level contacts at an airline like Aer Lingus, you can always take your complaint to the top. I list the names, numbers, and e-mail addresses of the customer service executives of Aer Lingus on my consumer advocacy site, Elliott.org.

I contacted Aer Lingus on your behalf. A representa­tive responded to me. “We have reviewed Ms. O’Brien’s case,” she told me. “Our terms and conditions for baggage fees are nonrefunda­ble. However, as a gesture of goodwill we have refunded her luggage fees.”

I’m not sure I would call that a gesture of goodwill. More like the right thing to do.

Christophe­r Elliott is the founder of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers solve their problems. E-mail him at chris@elliott.org or get help by contacting him on his site.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An Aer Lingus plane taxis before takeoff in Dublin in 2015.
REUTERS An Aer Lingus plane taxis before takeoff in Dublin in 2015.

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