Difference between after departure cancellation and no show
In the fare rules for a flight I found that there is a 200 AED charge for a cancel and refund after departure, and 400 AED for no show. How does this work/what are the refund rules here if I miss the flight?
ticket price - 400 (no-show) - 200(cancel/refund)
ticket price - 400 (max of noshow and cancel)
ticket price - 200 (only cancellation fee)
In case of 2 or 3, is there a scenario where a post departure cancellation fee applies, but not a no show fee?
The specific flight from where I picked this up is 9W 531 on 10th Jan 2016, however a generic answer would be ideal
CANCELLATIONS
BEFORE DEPARTURE
CHARGE AED 200 FOR CANCEL/REFUND.
NOTE - TEXT BELOW NOT VALIDATED FOR AUTOPRICING.
FULLY UNUTILIZED - ABOVE CHARGE WILL APPLY
.....
WAIVED FOR DEATH OF PASSENGER OR IMMEDIATE FAMILY
MEMBER.
.....
AFTER DEPARTURE
CHARGE AED 200 FOR CANCEL/REFUND.
NOTE - TEXT BELOW NOT VALIDATED FOR AUTOPRICING.
PARTIALLY UTILIZED - ABOVE CHARGE WILL APPLY
.....
FOR REFUND-
ON SECTORS WHERE FIRST CLASS/PREMIERE SERVICE IS
NOT OFFERED/AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF TICKETING
PASSENGERS MAY BE BOOKED IN THE NEXT LOWER CABIN.
NO REFUND WILL BE PERMITTED FOR CLASS DIFFERENCE
IN SUCH CASES.
.....
WAIVED FOR DEATH OF PASSENGER OR IMMEDIATE FAMILY
MEMBER.
.....
CHANGES/CANCELLATIONS
CHARGE AED 400 FOR NO-SHOW.
NOTE - TEXT BELOW NOT VALIDATED FOR AUTOPRICING.
INFANT DISCOUNT APPLICABLE ON PENALTIES.
.....
IF A NO SHOW TICKET IS PROCESSED FOR ANY CHANGES/
REFUND THEN THE PENALTIES FOR CHANGES/REFUND
WILL BE APPLICABLE IN ADDITION TO THE NO SHOW
PENALTY.
Best Answer
The difference is notification.
If you call / contact them and cancel your flight(s) then the penalty would be AED 200 if you notify them before you take any of the ticketed flights or AED 200 if you cancel after you started (ie cancel your return flight and come home another way). For this particular fare the penalties are the same, but that is not always the case, hence why they list them separately.
If you do not show up for your flight and did not contact them in advance to let them know you are not flying, then it is considered a No Show, in which case the AED 400 penalty would be applied to any refund you might be eligible for.
If you have another flight / ticket which is delayed causing you to miss the above referenced flight, it will still be considered a No Show, but the airline may take the situation into account and perhaps offer the lower penalty.
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Is it better to cancel or no-show?
If you know you can't make a scheduled flight, it's better to cancel your flight rather than be a no-show. If you cancel, you might receive a partial or whole credit for the fare purchased, to be applied to a future flight.Can airlines charge you for no-show?
Re: No Show fee vs. cancelling? You do not need to cancel, and should not - just do not turn up, the airline will not charge you. Airlines routinely overbook flights as they know a % of people miss their flight/do not turn up, so the "courtesy to let them know" issue also does not arise.What happens when you no-show your flight?
Some airlines include a no-show clause in their Contract of carriage. It basically means that a user not showing up for the outbound flight will be considered a no-show, and all the connecting flights associated with this one, even a return flight, will be cancelled and no refund will apply.Can I cancel flight after departure?
Exclusions/Waivers: You can cancel within 24 hours after your purchase and receive a full refund with no fees, provided the reservation is made 1 week or more prior to the scheduled departure.Hotel Front Office: Amendment, Cancellation and No Show
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Answer 2
You will pay one of the penalties (either the cancel or the no-show). Which one depends on the situation. You do not ever want to be a no-show. Your ticket has unusually generous terms; most tickets today have a penalty if cancelled or changed, but are void (lose all value) if you no-show.
If you ever find yourself in a situation where you will not make a flight (e.g., stuck in traffic, flat tire, inbound flight delay, stuck at connecting airport), call the airline. In many cases, you won't even be charged the change fee (especially if it's a situation out of your control) and you will be rebooked on a different flight. The exception to calling ahead is if you are in the U.S. flying on a domestic airline and will arrive at the airport (via car or train, not another flight) too late to clear security and board. In this situation, the phone agent is likely to charge you the change fee, so you are better off going to the airline ticket counter in the airport and hoping for treatment under the "flat tire" policy, under which an airport agent may rebook you on a different flight without charge.
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