The Morning Call (Sunday)

AeroMexico canceled flight, but I want refund, not credit

- By Christophe­r Elliott King Features Syndicate

A: You’re correct; if an airline cancels your flight, you get a refund. That’s a Department of Transporta­tion regulation. And, not only that, the airline must reimburse you within a week if you paid by credit card, which you did.

Ah, but wait — does that apply to an AeroMexico flight to Mexico City? As a matter of fact, it does. DOT regulation­s affect any commercial aircraft operating in the United States, regardless of destinatio­n.

Airlines would prefer you accept their new flights or a ticket credit, and you certainly can do that if you want. But you don’t have to. We had a problem with airlines pushing vouchers on passengers during the pandemic. Airlines said they couldn’t offer refunds because of “extraordin­ary” circumstan­ces. But the DOT would not allow that and reminded airlines that

Q: I recently booked a ticket on AeroMexico from Sacramento, California, to Sao Paulo, Brazil, with two stops in Mexico.

The airline canceled my flight three weeks later and rebooked me on a different flight. The new itinerary included a 10-hour stopover and no longer met my needs, so I asked for a refund.

I called AeroMexico three times to ask for my money back. Although the representa­tives were very friendly, they were unable to help me. When I asked for a supervisor, there was never one available.

AeroMexico has given me two options: Either I accept a flight voucher, or I take the new flight. But I thought when an airline cancels a flight or makes substantia­l changes to someone’s itinerary, I’m entitled to a full refund, even for nonrefunda­ble tickets. Can you help me? — Patrizia Azzellini, Sacramento, California

they were required to offer refunds.

It looks like you tried to call AeroMexico to resolve this. Then, you sent a formal request in writing — first through the airline’s website, and then to one of the executive contacts at AeroMexico that I publish on my consumer advocacy website. The airline ignored you.

Asking for a supervisor in a phone call rarely works. Chances are, they will pass you off to a colleague pretending to be a supervisor and tell you “no” in a hundred different ways.

You also told an agent that you would take legal action against AeroMexico if you didn’t get a refund. I understand your frustratio­n, but if you do that, your complaint may get routed to the airline’s legal department, which is often a dead end.

I have some more tips

on my site for resolving an airline complaint. Remaining calm and polite and reminding the airline of its requiremen­ts under the law would have been more effective than threatenin­g a lawsuit.

You also could have filed a complaint with the DOT. The agency would have contacted AeroMexico, and I’m sure you would have received a refund quickly.

But none of that was necessary. I reached out to the airline on your behalf, and it agreed to refund your ticket.

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.

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