Why is the airline fuel fee a tax?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
The price of my flight is shown in the picture below.
I want to understand the airline fuel fee better.
- Is it still legal to call it an "airline fuel fee"?
- Why is the airline fuel fee considered a tax?
To explain my questions:
It came to my attention that the fare price compared to the amount of taxes is unreasonably high. But the biggest chunk of taxes is one thing that isn't a tax anyway. The airline fuel fee.
I've read that the fee came from the high oil price era. The time is over and since it's not allowed to call it like that anymore, I think some airlines simply changed the name without changing the charge itself. Is it just a sloppy mistake to still use the name or is it still okay to do so?
If the fuel fee is just a label to distribute the costs on another point, why is it allowed to call a tax? Again is it just a sloppy way to write it down? All other costs in taxes are not taxes per se, but at least costs the airline has to pay and is not allowed to keep. Still the fuel fee is different.
The intention of this question is not to complain but to understand.
air-travel legal price fees-and-charges
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
The price of my flight is shown in the picture below.
I want to understand the airline fuel fee better.
- Is it still legal to call it an "airline fuel fee"?
- Why is the airline fuel fee considered a tax?
To explain my questions:
It came to my attention that the fare price compared to the amount of taxes is unreasonably high. But the biggest chunk of taxes is one thing that isn't a tax anyway. The airline fuel fee.
I've read that the fee came from the high oil price era. The time is over and since it's not allowed to call it like that anymore, I think some airlines simply changed the name without changing the charge itself. Is it just a sloppy mistake to still use the name or is it still okay to do so?
If the fuel fee is just a label to distribute the costs on another point, why is it allowed to call a tax? Again is it just a sloppy way to write it down? All other costs in taxes are not taxes per se, but at least costs the airline has to pay and is not allowed to keep. Still the fuel fee is different.
The intention of this question is not to complain but to understand.
air-travel legal price fees-and-charges
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
The price of my flight is shown in the picture below.
I want to understand the airline fuel fee better.
- Is it still legal to call it an "airline fuel fee"?
- Why is the airline fuel fee considered a tax?
To explain my questions:
It came to my attention that the fare price compared to the amount of taxes is unreasonably high. But the biggest chunk of taxes is one thing that isn't a tax anyway. The airline fuel fee.
I've read that the fee came from the high oil price era. The time is over and since it's not allowed to call it like that anymore, I think some airlines simply changed the name without changing the charge itself. Is it just a sloppy mistake to still use the name or is it still okay to do so?
If the fuel fee is just a label to distribute the costs on another point, why is it allowed to call a tax? Again is it just a sloppy way to write it down? All other costs in taxes are not taxes per se, but at least costs the airline has to pay and is not allowed to keep. Still the fuel fee is different.
The intention of this question is not to complain but to understand.
air-travel legal price fees-and-charges
The price of my flight is shown in the picture below.
I want to understand the airline fuel fee better.
- Is it still legal to call it an "airline fuel fee"?
- Why is the airline fuel fee considered a tax?
To explain my questions:
It came to my attention that the fare price compared to the amount of taxes is unreasonably high. But the biggest chunk of taxes is one thing that isn't a tax anyway. The airline fuel fee.
I've read that the fee came from the high oil price era. The time is over and since it's not allowed to call it like that anymore, I think some airlines simply changed the name without changing the charge itself. Is it just a sloppy mistake to still use the name or is it still okay to do so?
If the fuel fee is just a label to distribute the costs on another point, why is it allowed to call a tax? Again is it just a sloppy way to write it down? All other costs in taxes are not taxes per se, but at least costs the airline has to pay and is not allowed to keep. Still the fuel fee is different.
The intention of this question is not to complain but to understand.
air-travel legal price fees-and-charges
air-travel legal price fees-and-charges
edited Feb 17 at 5:25
dda
14.4k33051
14.4k33051
asked Feb 17 at 4:18
Ernst Ernst
1084
1084
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
Service providers like to deceive their customers by either showing them a lower price up until the person commits to the deal (currently illegal in the EU and in many other countries) or by pretending as if their own profits are actually smaller than they really are - Airbnb is one good example as they only show you half of the fee they end up charging. In your particular case the airline does its dirty trick by using a 'fuel surcharge' which dramatically lowers the perceived amount earned by the company.
But you as the consumer should not care about the fee structure at all. All that matters is the final price, everything else is superficial. To quote an article about the fuel surcharge:
"What goes into that [fee] for customers doesn't really matter because the competition happens at the cost-of-the-ticket level," Freed added. "It's really a non-issue for customers because there's various competition on what a ticket costs to go anywhere."
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
There are few points which may be relevant:
in most cases the language has been changed to âÂÂtaxes and surchargesâ or âÂÂtaxes and feesâ to better reflect these various components. Some sites / channels may not have been updated.
since the advertised price usually includes these taxes and surcharges, they are in most cases not relevant for the passenger. They are mostly a way for airlines to tell people âÂÂhey look, you can see here that a lot of the cost is not our fault, weâÂÂre just passing along things we have no control onâÂÂ...
add a comment |Â
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
Service providers like to deceive their customers by either showing them a lower price up until the person commits to the deal (currently illegal in the EU and in many other countries) or by pretending as if their own profits are actually smaller than they really are - Airbnb is one good example as they only show you half of the fee they end up charging. In your particular case the airline does its dirty trick by using a 'fuel surcharge' which dramatically lowers the perceived amount earned by the company.
But you as the consumer should not care about the fee structure at all. All that matters is the final price, everything else is superficial. To quote an article about the fuel surcharge:
"What goes into that [fee] for customers doesn't really matter because the competition happens at the cost-of-the-ticket level," Freed added. "It's really a non-issue for customers because there's various competition on what a ticket costs to go anywhere."
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
Service providers like to deceive their customers by either showing them a lower price up until the person commits to the deal (currently illegal in the EU and in many other countries) or by pretending as if their own profits are actually smaller than they really are - Airbnb is one good example as they only show you half of the fee they end up charging. In your particular case the airline does its dirty trick by using a 'fuel surcharge' which dramatically lowers the perceived amount earned by the company.
But you as the consumer should not care about the fee structure at all. All that matters is the final price, everything else is superficial. To quote an article about the fuel surcharge:
"What goes into that [fee] for customers doesn't really matter because the competition happens at the cost-of-the-ticket level," Freed added. "It's really a non-issue for customers because there's various competition on what a ticket costs to go anywhere."
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
Service providers like to deceive their customers by either showing them a lower price up until the person commits to the deal (currently illegal in the EU and in many other countries) or by pretending as if their own profits are actually smaller than they really are - Airbnb is one good example as they only show you half of the fee they end up charging. In your particular case the airline does its dirty trick by using a 'fuel surcharge' which dramatically lowers the perceived amount earned by the company.
But you as the consumer should not care about the fee structure at all. All that matters is the final price, everything else is superficial. To quote an article about the fuel surcharge:
"What goes into that [fee] for customers doesn't really matter because the competition happens at the cost-of-the-ticket level," Freed added. "It's really a non-issue for customers because there's various competition on what a ticket costs to go anywhere."
Service providers like to deceive their customers by either showing them a lower price up until the person commits to the deal (currently illegal in the EU and in many other countries) or by pretending as if their own profits are actually smaller than they really are - Airbnb is one good example as they only show you half of the fee they end up charging. In your particular case the airline does its dirty trick by using a 'fuel surcharge' which dramatically lowers the perceived amount earned by the company.
But you as the consumer should not care about the fee structure at all. All that matters is the final price, everything else is superficial. To quote an article about the fuel surcharge:
"What goes into that [fee] for customers doesn't really matter because the competition happens at the cost-of-the-ticket level," Freed added. "It's really a non-issue for customers because there's various competition on what a ticket costs to go anywhere."
answered Feb 17 at 4:35
JonathanReezâ¦
46.7k36213458
46.7k36213458
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
There are few points which may be relevant:
in most cases the language has been changed to âÂÂtaxes and surchargesâ or âÂÂtaxes and feesâ to better reflect these various components. Some sites / channels may not have been updated.
since the advertised price usually includes these taxes and surcharges, they are in most cases not relevant for the passenger. They are mostly a way for airlines to tell people âÂÂhey look, you can see here that a lot of the cost is not our fault, weâÂÂre just passing along things we have no control onâÂÂ...
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
There are few points which may be relevant:
in most cases the language has been changed to âÂÂtaxes and surchargesâ or âÂÂtaxes and feesâ to better reflect these various components. Some sites / channels may not have been updated.
since the advertised price usually includes these taxes and surcharges, they are in most cases not relevant for the passenger. They are mostly a way for airlines to tell people âÂÂhey look, you can see here that a lot of the cost is not our fault, weâÂÂre just passing along things we have no control onâÂÂ...
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
There are few points which may be relevant:
in most cases the language has been changed to âÂÂtaxes and surchargesâ or âÂÂtaxes and feesâ to better reflect these various components. Some sites / channels may not have been updated.
since the advertised price usually includes these taxes and surcharges, they are in most cases not relevant for the passenger. They are mostly a way for airlines to tell people âÂÂhey look, you can see here that a lot of the cost is not our fault, weâÂÂre just passing along things we have no control onâÂÂ...
There are few points which may be relevant:
in most cases the language has been changed to âÂÂtaxes and surchargesâ or âÂÂtaxes and feesâ to better reflect these various components. Some sites / channels may not have been updated.
since the advertised price usually includes these taxes and surcharges, they are in most cases not relevant for the passenger. They are mostly a way for airlines to tell people âÂÂhey look, you can see here that a lot of the cost is not our fault, weâÂÂre just passing along things we have no control onâÂÂ...
answered Feb 17 at 12:54
jcaron
8,6371735
8,6371735
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f109906%2fwhy-is-the-airline-fuel-fee-a-tax%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password