Is it possible to skip the last destination of an international flight?

Is it possible to skip the last destination of an international flight? - Top view of crop anonymous person holding toy airplane on colorful world map drawn on chalkboard

I purchased a ticket from Europe to Brazil for this year. My itinerary was initially Amsterdam-Madrid-Sao Paolo consisting of two flights with the same airline. And a third domestic flight in Brazil, from Sao- Paolo to Belo Horizonte with another airline, a brazilian one which is not part of the alliance with the one I coming from Europe (I am not sure if my ticket is code sharing or just a combination flight to reach Belo Horizonte). The ticket was purchased from a travel website which has good offers for flight tickets.

Until recently everything was ok but now I do not want to go to Belo Horizonte and my question will be if I will stick only to Sao Paolo and ignore the local flight will my entire return ticket from Brazil to Europe will be cancelled or it will only be the domestic flight with the brazilian airline?



Best Answer

If you miss one flight coupon in the ticket then, unless your ticket permits no-showing (unlikely unless it was very expensive) the remaining flights on the ticket will be cancelled.

There are exceptions, particularly when IT links between the airlines are poor, but that is what you agreed when you bought a discounted ticket.

If you want to change your itinerary then you should call the travel agent to make the change. A change before departure will be repriced using fares in effect today. A change after departure will be repriced using historical fares in effect at the time the ticket was first issued. Therefore, if you are very close to departure, it may be cheaper to make the change after you have flown the first flight on the ticket.




Pictures about "Is it possible to skip the last destination of an international flight?"

Is it possible to skip the last destination of an international flight? - Top view of miniature airplane placed on over gray world map with crop hand of anonymous person indicating direction representing travel concept
Is it possible to skip the last destination of an international flight? - From above of crop anonymous person driving toy airplane on empty world map drawn on blackboard representing travel concept
Is it possible to skip the last destination of an international flight? - Top view of crop anonymous person driving toy airplane on empty blackboard while representing journey concept



Can I skip last leg of international flight?

Another thing worth mentioning is that skipping the last leg of the flight isn't illegal, but it's against the airline's Conditions of Carriage. Theoretically, you don't even need to notify the airline. However, it may be a good idea to do that anyway.

Can I skip my last connecting flight?

And if your final flight is a domestic connection in the US, you must claim your luggage after clearing customs and then recheck it before your connecting flight. However, skipping the last flight becomes a problem if your bags are checked through to your final destination.

Can you abandon the last leg of a flight?

If you are flying within the USA and have no checked baggage to a final destination, then skipping the final leg of a journey is usually fine. There's no penalty for cancelling (as the missed leg is the end of your trip), and you can just leave the flight with hand luggage without any worries.

What happens if you miss the last leg of your flight?

One of today's most hardened airline rules says that if you miss or cancel any portion of a plane ticket, the airline can cancel all flights remaining on that ticket's itinerary. When you miss that first flight, whether or not you cancel or no-show, the entire ticket becomes void.



Flight Secrets That Are Never Told To Passengers




More answers regarding is it possible to skip the last destination of an international flight?

Answer 2

I am not an expert on such matters, but I have read many answers to this sort of question. This can be summarised as:

  • IF the return ticket was booked as a single trip you MAY have the whole balance cancelled.

  • Given the scenario you decribe there are probably too many possibilities to be sure of what the outcome will be without actually asking.

The travel website MAY be able to advise you, but such sites MAY not offer much support and, unless you can get their "opinion" in writing you'd have no defence if they turned out to be wrong (and even then that may not work).

In such a case I would personally seek written confirmation from somebody in the "link" whose answer should be binding. You could start by doing this anonymously - and may get success without having to give them details of the actual flights involved. In some cases, adding the domestic link may have made the overall journey cheaper (quite common) and removing it may increase the cost. If you started with the local airline they may be obliging - they are probably making money from the change.

Not giving your ID while you establish options is wise, if achievable, without casuing additional problems - this is neither dishonest nor against the rules - I have had experiences in life where asking people about options, or lack of them, has triggered circumstances which were counterproductive, regardless of my intentions.


Related only:

FWIW - on an "around the world" flight my daughter was scheduled to fly from Dublin to Munich but decided to instead fly Dublin-Amsterdam on another airline and rejoin the flight at Munich. Unaware of the consequences she inquired of Lufthansa in Dublin, was told that they would cancel her whole ticket if she did so and then not only did so (prior to her making the other flight) but also annotated the record with statements that it must not be reinstated. She being young and very charming managed to sort things out in due course in Munich. Lufthansa has lost several customers for life and hopefully a few more every time I tell this tale (regardless of what the rule book said).

On another occasion, QANTAS gave me a "free" flight Sydney-Brisbane when I missed a flight through no fault of my own but it was NOT linked to the main ticket (NZ-China-Australia) and I was not aware of the consequences. I told them how wonderful QANTAS was and I was sure they could sort something out, and they did. Hopefully telling that gains them customers :-)

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Andrea Piacquadio, Andrea Piacquadio, Andrea Piacquadio, Andrea Piacquadio