Remedies when bus company makes me miss a flight [closed]

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I'm buying a bus ticket to get to Boston 23 hours before my flight to ensure I reach my departure airport on time.

If I didn't arrange bus transport well in advance, what legal remedies would I have if a delayed bus caused me to miss my flight?



Best Answer

Transport does not work that way

If you book separate segments from separate companies, they don't owe you anything for a missed connection. They got you to the agreed location, their job is done.

If you book a multi segment ticket "thru" from a single airline, then that airline is responsible for your missed connections. So for instance if Delta sold you Glenwood Springs to Dubai, with GS to Denver and JFK-Dubai being codeshares with Amtrak and Emirates, and the Amtrak train is super late... It's all on Delta to get you to Dubai.

If you booked the Amtrak segment on your own (to save money), then tough beans.

So that thing you are looking for, happens with thru ticketing. Buy tickets that way. If you can't, buy missed connection insurance.




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Can you claim for missed flights?

If a flight delay leads to a passenger missing a connecting flight, and the delay at the final destination is 3 hours or more than 3 hours, they have a valid claim for compensation.

What happens if I miss my flight due to traffic?

If you missed your flight due to traffic, the airline may label you as a no show and cancel your entire itinerary. This is why it is important to call ahead and see if you can be rebooked on another flight so that you can still fly. Chances are, you will need to pay the rebooking fee.

How do you handle missing a flight?

Speak with an airline's representative at the first sign of trouble with your flight. Do not wait for confirmation that your flight will be delayed or canceled. The representative can let you know the status of your flight and help rebook you so that you don't miss any more of your vacation than you need to.



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More answers regarding remedies when bus company makes me miss a flight [closed]

Answer 2

You cannot coerce any company into taking that liability. It lies with you. Regardless of the form of transit, when you book separate tickets from point A to point B and point B to point C, the liability of a missed connection at B lies solely with you.

If you want someone else to be liable for getting you from point A to point C, you need to purchase that on a single ticket or else purchase missed connection insurance, wherein you pay an insurance company to assume that liability.

Answer 3

One possible course of action in this situation is to make alternate arrangements once it becomes clear that you're not going to make your flight, and then present a sympathetic story to the company's representatives.

A few months ago, my wife and I planned a trip to France. Our outbound itinerary involved taking Amtrak to Boston and then a flight out from Logan. When it became evident that the train was severely delayed, I talked to the station agent; she was sympathetic to our plight, and cancelled our Amtrak tickets for a full refund. We drove two hours to the airport instead (spending a couple hundred dollars on airport parking, which was what we were trying to avoid by taking the train.)

But there are a lot of caveats to this advice, and it might not be applicable to all situations:

  • We actually had an alternate method of transportation to get us there. The station agent suggested Uber instead, which also might have worked. (In the event, we had never used it before and weren't about to try it out for the first time in a high-stress situation.)

  • We didn't actually use Amtrak's services at all; if we had taken the delayed train and then tried to claim compensation, we almost certainly would have been out of luck.

  • The station agent didn't have to give us a refund; the Amtrak tickets we had purchased were non-refundable, so the best we could have expected was a voucher for future travel. I suspect that if our destination wasn't quite so romantic or exotic, the agent might not have been as willing to bend the rules for us.

  • We didn't try to claim any compensation from Amtrak for the incidental expense of the long-term parking at the airport, or for that matter the gas used to get us to the airport. I'm sure that they would have politely told us to go pound sand if we tried.

Answer 4

Many Travel Insurance policies cover the cost of flights missed because of documentable delays in transfers to the airport, but usually only if they are on a "public conveyance" (as I recall the wording from one policy) and (obviously) if the scheduled time would have permitted catching the flight properly (which probably means the full however-many hours the airline recommends). So a bus would count, and probably a taxi, but not your in-laws promising to drive you and never showing up.

I think that the availability of travel insurance is pretty much your only hope in this situation. Otherwise, the risk is yours to take.

Answer 5

The only way I've ever seen Travel Company A take responsibility for Travel Company B is if A booked B for you (i.e. was part of a package deal). Cruise lines, for instance, will book shore excursions for you or you can book your own, but with the understanding that, if you book it yourself, you're on the hook if you miss the boat (slightly oversimplified for the sake of example). As Gerrit also mentioned, sometimes public transits in Europe will also have agreements for liability, but only in limited circumstances (i.e. they have a partnership with said company). Such agreements are uncommon.

So, no, you cannot compel a bus company to take responsibility for you missing a flight. The only exception here might be something catastrophic (i.e. the bus flips over, catches fire, etc). In that case, you can sue for damages after the fact, and throw the missed flight into that number.

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