What do "Victor", "Tango", "Quebec", "Eco", "Sierra" flight ticket classes mean?

What do "Victor", "Tango", "Quebec", "Eco", "Sierra" flight ticket classes mean? - Message Against Bullying

I'm looking at buying a ticket on a regional airline in Colombia, Ada Aero. The tickets from Medellin to Pereira look like this:

Weird ticket codes

The plane is an old JetStream 32 with only 19 seats and the flight duration is 41 minutes. Hard to believe there are different seat or service types. Going through the booking process, it appears these are simply "Clase tarifaria", with random code names e.g. "Q (QUEBEC)".

Why would anyone not choose the cheapest available option?



Best Answer

Why would anyone not choose the cheapest available option?

Click on the "Condiciones" link and compare the results.

You should see different conditions relating to:

  • whether the fare is refundable or changeable or not
  • what the conditions are for refunds or changes, including when you can do so, and associated penalties
  • how long in advance you must buy the ticket
  • whether you can buy single tickets, or only round-trip fares
  • if there's a minimum or maximum stay
  • if you have to stay over a week-end
  • what other fares this one can be combined with for a multi-leg itinerary
  • probably not here, but you may have rules regarding stopovers for longer flights
  • possible routings
  • blackout dates, days of the week...
  • hand luggage and checked luggage allowances
  • and more.

The higher the fare, the more flexible it will be: some people are willing to pay a premium for more flexibility (a fully changeable and refundable flight without penalty), or for a last minute booking, etc. It's usually targeted at business vs. tourist. The former is supposed to be ready to pay more for that, while the latter will care more about price.

In some cases, two fares may have the exact same conditions, and it's just a matter of pricing as Henning Makholm stated: you'll have 4 seats at the cheapest fare, 6 at the next more expensive fare, 2 at the next one, for instance. As the flight fills up, the "buckets" for the cheapest fares become unavailable (as people will pick those), so the price increases: it's just offer and demand at play.




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What do the codes on airline tickets mean?

Booking classBooking codeMeaningFfull-fare First class, on airlines which have first class distinct from business class.Jfull-fare Business classWfull-fare Premium economyYfull-fare Economy class

What are the classes in flight ticket?

There are 4 cabin classes offered on most airlines: economy, premium economy, business, and first class.

What does class mean on flights?

Airline Class of Service Codes A - First Class Discounted. B - Economy/Coach \u2013 Usually an upgradable fare to Business. C - Business Class. D - Business Class Discounted. E - Shuttle Service (no reservation allowed) or Economy/Coach Discounted.

How do you read a fare basis code?

Within the fare code, one or two letters can tell you what fare class you have. While the letters can vary a bit by airline, an \u201cF\u201d nearly always means first class, while business class is often indicated with a J, C, or D.




More answers regarding what do "Victor", "Tango", "Quebec", "Eco", "Sierra" flight ticket classes mean?

Answer 2

Why would anyone not choose the cheapest available option?

They wouldn't -- so most booking sites don't bother showing all the options, and just present the cheapest price for each service class that's still available.

However, the data format that airlines use to inform ticket sellers happens to work in terms of fare classes. The travel agency's computer doesn't get told, "a seat on XY1234 costs $120, but a seat on XY1236 two hours later costs $155". It gets told, "XY1234 can be booked in fare class Q, P, T, E, S, and XY1236 can be booked in fare class P, T, E, S". It then looks up in a different set of tables what a ticket between such-and-such cities on such-and-such fare class costs.

Usually, the customer-facing front-end will translate away this complexity and, say, not show the more expensive options there would be no reason to buy. The one you're looking at apparently doesn't (fully) do this -- which might be because it is cheaply or quickly made, or out of a principled ambition to present as much information as possible to the customer, whether practically useful or not.

(Travel agencies need to know all of the available fare classes, because connecting flights are priced by fare components that may include several flights but has to be the same fare class throughout. So if you want to fly on XY1234 from AAA to BBB and then connect to XY543 from BBB to CCC, and it turns out that the lowest fare class available on XY543 is P, then you need to find a P fare from AAA to CCC, and it won't help you that XY1234 still has Q seats bookable. This complication is usually not shown to consumers either).

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