Skiplagging..what is it and why you should avoid it.
What’s Skiplagging?
Skiplagging, aka hidden city ticketing, is purchasing a cheaper airfare that has a layover in your actual destination and getting off the plane in that city with no intention to continue the rest of your trip. Your true destination is hidden in the middle, and it’s possible to save a handsome amount of cash by booking such itineraries. This is entirely possible and unwittingly entered in to if booking your travel online with some search engines out there. You see a cheap deal you have no idea what has been "arranged" behind the scenes.
Is Hidden City Ticketing Legal?
Technically, it’s not illegal in a sense that it’s not a crime. However, booking such tickets violates most airlines’ contracts of carriage, which you agree to by purchasing a flight in the first place. If an airline catches you practicing hidden city ticketing, it can force you to pay full price, nullify your loyalty account or refuse future service.
Airlines know that most flyers prefer nonstop flights and purposely charge more money for these desirable options. This is the reason the practice of hidden city ticketing has become so popular among crafty travelers.
Hidden city ticketing, or skiplagging, is buying a less expensive flight that has a layover in your preferred destination, getting off the plane in that city and not continuing the rest of your journey. Your true destination is hidden inside the ticket, and you can save money by doing this.
However, you have to be careful when booking such tricky tickets. First of all, you have to fly with a carry-on bag only. Checked luggage flies to your final destination and you won’t have access to it in that middle city. Second, you have to buy a one-way ticket because if you skip any portion of a flight itinerary, the airline will cancel the remaining segments.
Obviously, the airlines aren’t fond of this type of passenger behaviour. German carrier Lufthansa even went as far as suing one of its passengers for skiplagging, but that’s an extreme end of the punishment spectrum.
Legal action aside, here are a few reasons I don’t book hidden city tickets.It’s Against Terms and Conditions
When you purchase a flight, you enter into a contract with the carrier. Somewhere in the long contract of carriage, which no one ever reads, it says that you agree to fly the itinerary you purchased, blah blah blah, and skiplagging is essentially breaking that contract. Violating the agreement allows the airline to punish you the way it sees fit: forcing you to pay for the cost of the original ticket, erasing your frequent-flyer mileage balance or worse—refusing service.
I Like Earning Miles Too Much
Although skiplagging is technically not illegal, you still don’t want to be caught by the airline, and abusing the money-saving method raises too many flags. So, because you want to be as incognito as possible, in addition to wearing shades and a hat, you want to hide your frequent-flyer number from the airline when booking hidden city itineraries. Personally, I like earning miles way too much to be messing with the opportunity to earn more or risking to lose my entire balance. No, thanks!
Irregular Operations Can Mess Up My Plans
Things happen, and your flight can get delayed or canceled for various reasons, such as weather, mechanical or missing crew. Whatever it is, the airline likely will re-route you on another flight to your final destination. You might get “lucky” and get rebooked on a nonstop flight to wherever you didn’t want to go in the first place. You see, the airline’s part of the deal is getting you to where your ticket says final destination is, not the layover city. What then? I don’t want to be the one to find out.
The Effect on Fellow Travellers
Unfortunately, airports are like the Hunger Games, and it’s every man for himself. However, buying up seats with no intention of using them makes it more expensive for other passengers to buy the remaining seats. So, let’s be nice to one another and nip this questionable practice in the bud. I recommend using other techniques to save on airfare, such as redeeming frequent-flyer miles or taking advantage of flight deals through a professional travel broker.
Think You’ve Got the Answer? Today’s Riddle Says ‘Prove It’!
If eleven plus two equals one, what does nine plus five equal?
Do you think you know the answer to our daily riddle? Don't spoil it for your neighbours! Simply 'Like' this post and we'll post the answer in the comments below at 2pm.
Want to stop seeing riddles in your newsfeed?
Head here and hover on the Following button on the top right of the page (and it will show Unfollow) and then click it. If it is giving you the option to Follow, then you've successfully unfollowed the Riddles page.
Live Q&A: Garden maintenance with Crewcut
This Wednesday, we are having another Neighbourly Q&A session. This time with John Bracewell from Crewcut.
John Bracewell, former Black Caps coach turned Franchisee Development Manager and currently the face of Crewcut’s #Movember campaign, knows a thing or two about keeping the grass looking sharp—whether it’s on a cricket pitch or in your backyard!
As a seasoned Crewcut franchisee, John is excited to answer your lawn and gardening questions. After years of perfecting the greens on the field, he's ready to share tips on how to knock your garden out of the park. Let's just say he’s as passionate about lush lawns as he is about a good game of cricket!
John is happy to answer questions about lawn mowing, tree/hedge trimming, tidying your garden, ride on mowing, you name it! He'll be online on Wednesday, 27th of November to answer them all.
Share your question below now ⬇️
Calling All Puzzle Masters! Can You Solve This?
When John was six years old he hammered a nail into his favorite tree to mark his height.
Ten years later at age sixteen, John returned to see how much higher the nail was.
If the tree grew by five centimetres each year, how much higher would the nail be?
Do you think you know the answer to our daily riddle? Don't spoil it for your neighbours! Simply 'Like' this post and we'll post the answer in the comments below at 2pm.
Want to stop seeing riddles in your newsfeed?
Head here and hover on the Following button on the top right of the page (and it will show Unfollow) and then click it. If it is giving you the option to Follow, then you've successfully unfollowed the Riddles page.