airlines raising price one day after I check for availability
#1
Posted 2011-February-04, 10:10
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2011-February-04, 10:33
Note if they get alot of hits for a flight they may think demand is increasing and raise the price.
Try checking prices online on a Tuesday for anyday future flights. Online prices tend to rise closer to the weekend when more people are looking. Good hunting.
#3
Posted 2011-February-04, 10:41
Personally, I've noticed Emirates airfares going up every single time I check and they never seem to go down, so this means more of my money going to Singapore Airlines.
If it's one of the budget airlines, things might be different though.
Unless explicitly stated, none of my views here can be taken to represent SCBA or any other organizations.
#4
Posted 2011-February-04, 11:45
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2011-February-04, 14:08
Even for 1 class, they have multiple buckets with different prices, and small changes in rules. The rules changes mostly correspond to how easy you would be able to get refunds or make changes with no penalties or upgrade rules.
There are big agents and consolidators who buy up lots of tickets at a row. So they can easily buy up an entire bucket. Also, 6-10 weeks is a very short time away for an air tix purchase. You may get lucky and find a new sales going on somewhere, but otherwise many of the usual cheaper buckets would be taken by this time.
(Edit to add: Because of this, you may have good luck trying the agents and consolidators who bought those cheaper fare classes...)
I think you should think about priceline or award ticket if you're left with the full fare options. I remember buying a full fare economy ticket (Y) and it's more expensive than a discounted business class ticket. Makes you feel pretty stupid when you have to do something like that...unless it's reimbursable.
http://matrix.itasoftware.com/
Can use this to search.
John Nelson.
#7
Posted 2011-February-04, 19:16
George Carlin
#8
Posted 2011-February-04, 20:02
#9
Posted 2011-February-04, 21:58
shyams, on 2011-February-04, 18:12, said:
I heard a story on public radio a few weeks ago about online shopping sites that present different prices to customers depending on their history on the site. Frequent shoppers would see higher prices because they presumably don't need to be enticed to purchase.
I don't think this is "illegal", but maybe it depends on where you live.
#10
Posted 2011-February-06, 05:09
I also read that sometimes prices depend on the weekday. For most routes, that would mean it is cheaper to book on the weekend, since you won't be mistaken for someone who is spending money from a corporate account.
#11
Posted 2011-February-06, 07:11
I don't know which, but I know I checked yesterday also and this morning I threw out the cookies and now it was cheap again (so I didn't do a scientific survey trying first this morning with cookies, then without). Well it wasn't so expensive anyway, only a difference of 25% (or 33%). It was just extremely annoying.
George Carlin
#12
Posted 2011-February-06, 09:21
1) Fixed price, varies with time to fly but not with demand. Seems like lufthansa does this.
2) Price is a function of how many seats are left on the plane. I think quantus flights to Australia use this model, so booking earlier is always cheaper.
3) Price is some function of demand, so takes into account how often a flight is looked at, how many empty seats it has, and how long until it flies. I think BA does this.
#13
Posted 2011-February-06, 09:22
#14
Posted 2011-February-06, 11:03
phil_20686, on 2011-February-06, 09:21, said:
1) Fixed price, varies with time to fly but not with demand. Seems like lufthansa does this.
2) Price is a function of how many seats are left on the plane. I think quantus flights to Australia use this model, so booking earlier is always cheaper.
3) Price is some function of demand, so takes into account how often a flight is looked at, how many empty seats it has, and how long until it flies. I think BA does this.
There's some places that have a u-like curve: if you buy it very early (3 months say) then it's expensive. They say that they can sell the tickets anyway, so if they find some loser who wants to pay more, let him.
George Carlin