Daily Press (Sunday)

Credit for TAP Air Portugal should’ve been a full refund

- By Christophe­r Elliott

A: You should have never received a credit from TAP Air Portugal or Travelocit­y. Instead, they should have given you a complete refund after canceling your return flight.

After the COVID19 outbreak began in 2020, TAP argued that the pandemic was an extraordin­ary circumstan­ce and that it could only offer a flight credit for canceled tickets. But EU regulation­s require an airline to offer either your choice of a full refund or a credit for a canceled flight, no matter the reason for the cancellati­on. Eventually, authoritie­s forced TAP to issue full refunds, but the airline took its time. It’s nothing short of the biggest refund scandal in modern aviation (more informatio­n about refunds can be found at www.elliott. org/airline-problems/ what-should-you-do-ifyour-airline-wont-refundyour-ticket/).

But somewhere between

King Features Syndicate

Q: I’m trying to get a refund for a flight canby celed TAP Air Portugal during the pandemic. In March 2 0 2 0 , while I was in Lisbon, authordecl­ared ities a pandemic. On April 4 , TAP Air Portugal stopped flying to the U.S.

I tried changing my flight, but TAP wouldn’t answer the phone. So I purchased new tickets to fly home. When I checked in for my flight back to the U.S., I spoke to a TAP agent at the airport, who promised I’d get a refund.

Instead, my online travel agency, Travelocit­y, gave me a flight credit. But now, the credit has expired, and TAP won’t respond to me or Travelocit­y regarding my refund. Also, my TAP account is locked.

The last I heard from TAP is that since Travelocit­y issued the ticket, Travelocit­y “has the ability to process our refund and has been provided with instructio­ns on how to do so.” I need your help getting $1,881 refunded from either TAP or Travelocit­y — whichever company has the money.

— Mary Dexter, Newton Centre, Massachuse­tts

TAP and Travelocit­y, your tickets remained in the system as an expiring credit. It’s highly unusual — though not unprecefor dented — an online agency to be an accomplice to an airline that doesn’t want to return your money. So I thought something else might be going on.

I publish the company contacts for TAP Air Portugal and Travelocit­y on my advocacy site at www.elliott.org/companycon­tacts/tap-air-portugal/ and www.elliott.org/ company-contacts/ expedia-customer-servicecon­tacts/. (Expedia owns Travelocit­y.) You could have sent an email to one of them, asking them to review your refund request. I checked your paper trail, and it seemed everyone was cooperatin­g with your refund request — until they weren’t.

What could be going on? I asked Travelocit­y. It turns out Travelocit­y wanted to refund your tickets, but it says it couldn’t. “When

attempting to process, our agents learned the card on file is expired,” a representa­tive told me. “Our customer service team sent an email requesting new card details in August, but had not heard from Mary.”

It’s possible that Travelocit­y’s emails went to your spam folder. It’s always a good idea to check your spam folder every once in a while and whitelist emails from companies you trust. Also, if you’re expecting a refund and your card expires, let the company know your new credit card informatio­n.

You received a full refund of $1,881 from Travelocit­y.

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 chris@elliott.org.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States