Are flights from London to Bucharest for real? COVID-19
I urgently need a one-way ticket to Bucharest, Romania. In the last two weeks, I booked with Wizz-air from Luton, flight got cancelled, booked again, cancelled again 3 times with the reason given by airline staff: "airport restrictions". They are not prepared to say any more than that.
Flights were not available to buy before June and now they are, which had made me hopeful, however it's hard to know whether this is an ongoing issue with the origin or destination airport, or whether I've just been unlucky with the days I picked somehow clashing with multiple one-day restrictions.
Has anyone actually flown from London to Bucharest in recent days, or does anyone have tangible evidence of an airline doing that journey with passengers for real?
(I understand I may be subject to quarantine, so to be clear, that is not what I am asking)
Best Answer
FlightAware showed me out of the last week, only one Ryanair flight flew from Stansted to Bucharest. Everything else from all three major London airports, including those Wizz Air flights, was cancelled. There is another Ryanair flight (1007) scheduled for tomorrow afternoon, if you want to try your luck.
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Answer 2
This doesn't depend on regulations or restrictions, and isn't imposed by any government or airport either. It depends entirely on the airlines.
According to this Corriere della Sera article (in Italian), airlines are intentionally selling tickets that they know will be cancelled, because COVID-19 brought them to their knees and these "ghost" tickets let them earn some money.
The key point is that operating a flight with very few passengers is too expensive. Cancelling it is cheaper. Why, then, don't airlines simply stop selling those tickets?
The newspaper interviewed executives of two low-cost companies, who provided these reasons:
- The flights were loaded on the sales system months before the epidemic broke out, and have never been removed. A very weak excuse, for sure.
- The flights are still for sale because this helps the airlines identify the most profitable routes in these anomalous times. This has a value to them.
- Another reason, subtler: when passengers buy a ticket, they pay with real money. When the airline cancels the flight, it gives them a voucher. Possibly worth a bit more than the ticket's price, but still only a voucher. So the airline gets to keep the money. Please note that this isn't allowed by consumer protection regulations, but they are still doing it. They are really desperate, and really broke.
The article estimates that in the week between June 15 and June 21 a total of 17.8 million seats were sold, but only 3.9 were real. That's around 22%.
So, how does knowing the airlines' strategy help you find a ticket that doesn't get cancelled? You can try choosing the most expensive flight you can find. Why? Well, if a ticket doesn't get cancelled it must be because it was bought by many passengers, and in that case it's reasonable that its price has risen due to the high demand. But of course it's still a bet, and a risky one.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Kei Scampa, Sohel Patel, Olga Lioncat, Olga Lioncat