Santa Fe New Mexican

Airline booking hacks: A guide

What works — and what might get you in trouble with carriers

- By Elaine Glusac

Between bargain-shopping travelers and airlines flashing ephemeral prices, searching for the lowest airfares can feel like a game of cat and mouse. Sometimes, the game carries real-world risks, including the recent news that Lufthansa is suing a passenger whom the airline contends intentiona­lly skipped a flight leg using a largely prohibited budgetbook­ing practice known as hidden city.

Bargain hunting has led to a rise in cheap travel websites and rules of thumb for booking, such as flying at off-peak times and on slower days.

“People would like a simple rule, but in practice, there isn’t a single day or time to buy,” said Patrick Surry, chief data scientist for Hopper, an airfare prediction app. Factors most impacting airfares, he said, are “the day you travel, how long you stay and the airport you’re flying.” How far in advance you book can also determine the price you pay.

Having flexibilit­y in travel is one sure way to get the best fare. Many search engines, including Kayak and Hopper, allow users to register for price-alert tracking that recommends whether to buy now or wait for future price drops. The app HitList allows users to track a route with unspecifie­d dates or lengths of travel.

Other booking ploys, surveyed below, may or may not get you into trouble with the airlines.

Hidden city fares

Hidden city fares are one-way tickets through a connecting city where passengers intentiona­lly stay in the layover city. For example, a flier from New York City to San Francisco may find it cheaper to book a one-stop flight to Seattle connecting through San Francisco, disembark there and not take the last leg to Seattle. The practice also is known as skiplaggin­g.

Finding these fares required a lot of scattersho­t searching and knowledge of airline competitio­n until the website Skiplagged.com automated it in 2013. Its founder, Aktarer Zaman, was sued for deception by United Airlines and the online travel agency Orbitz in 2015, but that lawsuit was dismissed based on jurisdicti­on, and the website is still going strong.

Clearly, airlines don’t like skiplaggin­g, which prevents them from selling the empty seat. Delta, United and American now explicitly ban exploiting fare rules in their contracts of carriage. For example, American Airlines states that “reservatio­ns made to exploit or circumvent fare and ticket rules are strictly prohibited.” This includes purchasing a ticket “without intending to fly all flights to gain lower fares (hidden city).”

Some also argue the practice is unethical. “For every dollar someone scams, and I do think it’s a scam, that dollar is going to be placed back into the airfare structure of the airlines that everyone else pays,” said George Hobica, the founder of Airfarewat­chdog.com, a site that monitors airfare deals.

Zaman looks at the practice differentl­y. “When you go to the store and buy a bag of chips, is it unethical to finish only half of it?” Zaman said. He notes that Skiplagged.com is for the average American flyer — who flies two times a year, according to the trade associatio­n Airlines for America — not for someone who intends to book hidden city routes often.

“Our mission is to make it easier to experience the world,” Zaman added. “We make flying more accessible, so we’re fighting against price discrimina­tion and the way airlines try to take advantage of everybody.”

Hacker fares

Many flight hacks are termed hacker fares, but Kayak popularize­d the term used in its search results on round-trip queries to show two one-way tickets, often on competing airlines, at rock-bottom prices.

For example, a recent search for fares from Chicago to Los Angeles turned up nonstop round trips on United from $321, versus $275 with an outbound on Delta and a return on American. Round-trip prices for the same itinerary turned up fares of $372 on Delta and $312 on American, both more expensive than that $275 combinatio­n of two one-way fares.

“Hacker fares are what Kayak does to discover cheapness, but also more diversity in results in terms of flight schedules,” Giorgos Zacharia, the chief technology officer at Kayak, said. “Domestical­ly, if you fly out with one airline and return with a different one, you can create a lot of savings.”

Resident fares

Sometimes a ticket purchased from within a foreign country costs less than the same airfare in the United States. That’s because airlines price their flights based on competitiv­e factors in local markets, including the wealth of consumers and their willingnes­s to fly.

Airline search engines can tell where you reside based on your computer’s internet protocol or IP address. Users can mask that address by subscribin­g to a VPN, or virtual private network, which allows you to search anonymousl­y (plans at NordVPN, one provider, start at $2.99 a month). Some travel strategist­s believe this works.

VPNs are legal in the United States. Though often associated with dark uses of the web, they can also protect you when using free public Wi-Fi.

An easier approach may be to use a foreign travel agent. Tierra Hotels, which operates lodges in Chile’s Atacama Desert, Patagonia and Lakes regions, often refers North American guests to the Santiago-based travel agency Cocha for flights from the capital to its properties. Cocha recently found round-trip tickets between Santiago and Punta Arenas in Patagonia for $262 versus results I received searching Latam Airlines from my office at $324.

Open-jaw tickets

Open-jaw tickets, often called multistop bookings on airline sites, are for round-trip flights that arrive at one destinatio­n and leave from another. For example, you may wish to fly from New York to London, then take the Eurostar train to continenta­l Europe and later fly back home from Paris.

Open jaws can save you money, especially on internatio­nal itinerarie­s as one-way flights outside the United States are often costly. Most airlines and search engines offer multistop search options, making the practice easy.

 ?? ALEX CITRIN/NEW YORK TIMES ??
ALEX CITRIN/NEW YORK TIMES

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