Breaking the connecting flight










4















I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India) airport and my connecting flight to ATL is in London-Heathrow with a layover of 3 hours. I was wondering if I can break my connecting flight by collecting my baggage because I want to stay over in London for a few days. I would not want my baggage to reach Atlanta, can I take my baggage off a connecting flight like that?
P.S: Have a UK standard visitor visa. This flight is a one way ticket to ATL










share|improve this question
























  • Have you already bought your ticket?

    – David Richerby
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:13











  • Or is it a single ticket?

    – Johns-305
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:24






  • 1





    Never mind the tickets, you'll need a UK visa to do this.

    – Michael Hampton
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:08











  • sorry i forgot to mention this -yes i do have a UK standard visitor visa, so thats not an issue and it is a one-way ticket to ATL

    – Alisha
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:22







  • 4





    As @PatriciaShanahan has said, you now want a stopover and you have to contact BA to make that change to your itinerary, and pay any additional amount required. Once that has been done, your bags will be checked to London on the first leg. Unless you make that change, your bags will be checked through to Atlanta, you won't have access to them in London, and your ticket between London/Atlanta would be cancelled if you don't show up for the connection.

    – Giorgio
    Oct 28 '16 at 1:41















4















I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India) airport and my connecting flight to ATL is in London-Heathrow with a layover of 3 hours. I was wondering if I can break my connecting flight by collecting my baggage because I want to stay over in London for a few days. I would not want my baggage to reach Atlanta, can I take my baggage off a connecting flight like that?
P.S: Have a UK standard visitor visa. This flight is a one way ticket to ATL










share|improve this question
























  • Have you already bought your ticket?

    – David Richerby
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:13











  • Or is it a single ticket?

    – Johns-305
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:24






  • 1





    Never mind the tickets, you'll need a UK visa to do this.

    – Michael Hampton
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:08











  • sorry i forgot to mention this -yes i do have a UK standard visitor visa, so thats not an issue and it is a one-way ticket to ATL

    – Alisha
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:22







  • 4





    As @PatriciaShanahan has said, you now want a stopover and you have to contact BA to make that change to your itinerary, and pay any additional amount required. Once that has been done, your bags will be checked to London on the first leg. Unless you make that change, your bags will be checked through to Atlanta, you won't have access to them in London, and your ticket between London/Atlanta would be cancelled if you don't show up for the connection.

    – Giorgio
    Oct 28 '16 at 1:41













4












4








4








I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India) airport and my connecting flight to ATL is in London-Heathrow with a layover of 3 hours. I was wondering if I can break my connecting flight by collecting my baggage because I want to stay over in London for a few days. I would not want my baggage to reach Atlanta, can I take my baggage off a connecting flight like that?
P.S: Have a UK standard visitor visa. This flight is a one way ticket to ATL










share|improve this question
















I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India) airport and my connecting flight to ATL is in London-Heathrow with a layover of 3 hours. I was wondering if I can break my connecting flight by collecting my baggage because I want to stay over in London for a few days. I would not want my baggage to reach Atlanta, can I take my baggage off a connecting flight like that?
P.S: Have a UK standard visitor visa. This flight is a one way ticket to ATL







air-travel luggage connecting-flight






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Oct 28 '16 at 0:28







Alisha

















asked Oct 27 '16 at 23:07









AlishaAlisha

213




213












  • Have you already bought your ticket?

    – David Richerby
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:13











  • Or is it a single ticket?

    – Johns-305
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:24






  • 1





    Never mind the tickets, you'll need a UK visa to do this.

    – Michael Hampton
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:08











  • sorry i forgot to mention this -yes i do have a UK standard visitor visa, so thats not an issue and it is a one-way ticket to ATL

    – Alisha
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:22







  • 4





    As @PatriciaShanahan has said, you now want a stopover and you have to contact BA to make that change to your itinerary, and pay any additional amount required. Once that has been done, your bags will be checked to London on the first leg. Unless you make that change, your bags will be checked through to Atlanta, you won't have access to them in London, and your ticket between London/Atlanta would be cancelled if you don't show up for the connection.

    – Giorgio
    Oct 28 '16 at 1:41

















  • Have you already bought your ticket?

    – David Richerby
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:13











  • Or is it a single ticket?

    – Johns-305
    Oct 27 '16 at 23:24






  • 1





    Never mind the tickets, you'll need a UK visa to do this.

    – Michael Hampton
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:08











  • sorry i forgot to mention this -yes i do have a UK standard visitor visa, so thats not an issue and it is a one-way ticket to ATL

    – Alisha
    Oct 28 '16 at 0:22







  • 4





    As @PatriciaShanahan has said, you now want a stopover and you have to contact BA to make that change to your itinerary, and pay any additional amount required. Once that has been done, your bags will be checked to London on the first leg. Unless you make that change, your bags will be checked through to Atlanta, you won't have access to them in London, and your ticket between London/Atlanta would be cancelled if you don't show up for the connection.

    – Giorgio
    Oct 28 '16 at 1:41
















Have you already bought your ticket?

– David Richerby
Oct 27 '16 at 23:13





Have you already bought your ticket?

– David Richerby
Oct 27 '16 at 23:13













Or is it a single ticket?

– Johns-305
Oct 27 '16 at 23:24





Or is it a single ticket?

– Johns-305
Oct 27 '16 at 23:24




1




1





Never mind the tickets, you'll need a UK visa to do this.

– Michael Hampton
Oct 28 '16 at 0:08





Never mind the tickets, you'll need a UK visa to do this.

– Michael Hampton
Oct 28 '16 at 0:08













sorry i forgot to mention this -yes i do have a UK standard visitor visa, so thats not an issue and it is a one-way ticket to ATL

– Alisha
Oct 28 '16 at 0:22






sorry i forgot to mention this -yes i do have a UK standard visitor visa, so thats not an issue and it is a one-way ticket to ATL

– Alisha
Oct 28 '16 at 0:22





4




4





As @PatriciaShanahan has said, you now want a stopover and you have to contact BA to make that change to your itinerary, and pay any additional amount required. Once that has been done, your bags will be checked to London on the first leg. Unless you make that change, your bags will be checked through to Atlanta, you won't have access to them in London, and your ticket between London/Atlanta would be cancelled if you don't show up for the connection.

– Giorgio
Oct 28 '16 at 1:41





As @PatriciaShanahan has said, you now want a stopover and you have to contact BA to make that change to your itinerary, and pay any additional amount required. Once that has been done, your bags will be checked to London on the first leg. Unless you make that change, your bags will be checked through to Atlanta, you won't have access to them in London, and your ticket between London/Atlanta would be cancelled if you don't show up for the connection.

– Giorgio
Oct 28 '16 at 1:41










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















9














This answer assumes the OP still intends to travel to Atlanta, but with a few days stay in the UK.



If the OP does not change the itinerary in advance, there could be several problems.



With only a 3 hour layover at LHR, it is very unlikely that the the OP will be able to get bags checked to LHR. It will be very similar to a "hidden city" flight, and the usual advice is carry-on only.



The OP will still have to obtain a London->Atlanta ticket for the actual day of travel. The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board. Buying the new ticket should be done in advance, so that the OP has an outgoing ticket if questioned by immigration, and for any opportunity for advance purchase prices. The new ticket should be completely separate from the old one, to reduce the risk of cancellation after the no-show.



If the OP arranges the stopover in advance, it should all go smoothly.



When the OP checks in at Mumbai, there will be no immediate connecting flight, so the bags will naturally be checked to LHR on the first leg. When going through immigration, the OP will have a visitor visa, a plan for a few days of tourism or similar in the UK, and a ticket, consistent with that plan, for the onward flight to Atlanta.



When the OP returns to LHR for the second leg, the bags will be checked to Atlanta.



There will be some additional cost, but it is likely to be less than the cost of a new London->Atlanta ticket, especially if the new ticket has to be purchased at full fare or close to it.






share|improve this answer























  • "The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board." BA allows no showing on their Indian originating oneway fares.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 8:29












  • @Calchas That is good news. If the ticket has that degree of flexibility, changing it to insert the stopover is likely to be free or very cheap, and will ensure delivery of the bags at Heathrow.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:44


















7














You can change your ticket now.



You have a one way ticket from Mumbai to Atlanta. All of BA's (public) one way fares are at least semi-flexible, meaning you can change them for a small fee. From what I can see, there is a 5000 INR penalty for changes on the cheaper tariff. The more expensive fares have no change penalty at all. I would advise that you make the change now.



You will also have to pay the UK air passenger duty if your new itinerary includes a stop in London over 24 hours.



If you are planning not to travel onto Atlanta, you may (or may not) be entitled to a refund on the fare difference between BOM-ATL and BOM-LON. Whether you are entitled to a refund depends on the exact fare you purchased. You may find it is cheaper simply to throw away the London-Atlanta leg without formally changing the ticket.



You can (probably) change your ticket later.



Even the cheapest public BA fare on BOM-ATL permits "no showing", admittedly at a fee of 10,000 INR, meaning you can simply not show up for the second flight, and still take it on another day. The more expensive fares allow no showing and rebooking without penalty. But I wouldn't advise it without checking, in case you are travelling on a private fare from a travel agent which has more stringent conditions. On the day of travel you would have to pay the difference up to the appropriate fare offered that day, assuming there were any seats available for you.



If you don't need to go to Atlanta, you can throw away the London-Atlanta leg and forget about it.



After passport control, you can go downstairs to baggage claim, tell them you have decided not to take your onward flight and you'd like your bags back.



In this circumstance, it may take a couple of hours for your bags to be found and returned to you.






share|improve this answer

























  • The "change your ticket later" option may inconvenience other passengers, as it's possible that retrieving your bags will delay the onward flight. At very least, it will create some extra hassle for baggage handling employees. You really ought to change your itinerary as soon as you know you want to do this (it's cheaper for you anyway).

    – user35890
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:50






  • 3





    @dan1111 The bags will never be loaded if the passenger does not clear conformance ("Ready to Fly") at Terminal 5. This happens when the passenger presents his boarding pass prior to security. This is a feature unique to LHR Terminal 5. At other terminals and other airports you are correct.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:55












  • +1 for specifics of the particular case of flying from India via Heathrow on BA.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 29 '16 at 13:56


















1














As it currently stands, no. When you check in, you'll be given two boarding passes, one for BOM-LHR and one for LHR-ATL, but your luggage will be checked in for Mumbai.



Will BA be willing to replace your one ticket with two tickets covering the same legs, so you will be able to get your luggage at Heathrow? Certainly. Will they do it for free? you can ask, but airlines are famous for not doing things for free.



And three hours? If your plan is to get off the plan, go through Immigration, collect your bags, go through Customs, walk to Departures, check your bags, and get on the plane to Atlanta, three hours is just barely enough to do it safely.



If your plan is to do all that and take the Underground to Piccadilly Circus, turn around and come back, no, you don't have enough time.



If your plan is to actually see something on the island of Great Britain, other than transportation facilities.



EDIT: Patricia points out the OP is planning to extend his stay in Blighty. The airline will almost certainly charge for that.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    I think you have the trip backwards: " I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India)". The OP wants to take a multi-day layover, not see London in 3 hours.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 3:09










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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














This answer assumes the OP still intends to travel to Atlanta, but with a few days stay in the UK.



If the OP does not change the itinerary in advance, there could be several problems.



With only a 3 hour layover at LHR, it is very unlikely that the the OP will be able to get bags checked to LHR. It will be very similar to a "hidden city" flight, and the usual advice is carry-on only.



The OP will still have to obtain a London->Atlanta ticket for the actual day of travel. The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board. Buying the new ticket should be done in advance, so that the OP has an outgoing ticket if questioned by immigration, and for any opportunity for advance purchase prices. The new ticket should be completely separate from the old one, to reduce the risk of cancellation after the no-show.



If the OP arranges the stopover in advance, it should all go smoothly.



When the OP checks in at Mumbai, there will be no immediate connecting flight, so the bags will naturally be checked to LHR on the first leg. When going through immigration, the OP will have a visitor visa, a plan for a few days of tourism or similar in the UK, and a ticket, consistent with that plan, for the onward flight to Atlanta.



When the OP returns to LHR for the second leg, the bags will be checked to Atlanta.



There will be some additional cost, but it is likely to be less than the cost of a new London->Atlanta ticket, especially if the new ticket has to be purchased at full fare or close to it.






share|improve this answer























  • "The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board." BA allows no showing on their Indian originating oneway fares.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 8:29












  • @Calchas That is good news. If the ticket has that degree of flexibility, changing it to insert the stopover is likely to be free or very cheap, and will ensure delivery of the bags at Heathrow.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:44















9














This answer assumes the OP still intends to travel to Atlanta, but with a few days stay in the UK.



If the OP does not change the itinerary in advance, there could be several problems.



With only a 3 hour layover at LHR, it is very unlikely that the the OP will be able to get bags checked to LHR. It will be very similar to a "hidden city" flight, and the usual advice is carry-on only.



The OP will still have to obtain a London->Atlanta ticket for the actual day of travel. The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board. Buying the new ticket should be done in advance, so that the OP has an outgoing ticket if questioned by immigration, and for any opportunity for advance purchase prices. The new ticket should be completely separate from the old one, to reduce the risk of cancellation after the no-show.



If the OP arranges the stopover in advance, it should all go smoothly.



When the OP checks in at Mumbai, there will be no immediate connecting flight, so the bags will naturally be checked to LHR on the first leg. When going through immigration, the OP will have a visitor visa, a plan for a few days of tourism or similar in the UK, and a ticket, consistent with that plan, for the onward flight to Atlanta.



When the OP returns to LHR for the second leg, the bags will be checked to Atlanta.



There will be some additional cost, but it is likely to be less than the cost of a new London->Atlanta ticket, especially if the new ticket has to be purchased at full fare or close to it.






share|improve this answer























  • "The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board." BA allows no showing on their Indian originating oneway fares.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 8:29












  • @Calchas That is good news. If the ticket has that degree of flexibility, changing it to insert the stopover is likely to be free or very cheap, and will ensure delivery of the bags at Heathrow.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:44













9












9








9







This answer assumes the OP still intends to travel to Atlanta, but with a few days stay in the UK.



If the OP does not change the itinerary in advance, there could be several problems.



With only a 3 hour layover at LHR, it is very unlikely that the the OP will be able to get bags checked to LHR. It will be very similar to a "hidden city" flight, and the usual advice is carry-on only.



The OP will still have to obtain a London->Atlanta ticket for the actual day of travel. The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board. Buying the new ticket should be done in advance, so that the OP has an outgoing ticket if questioned by immigration, and for any opportunity for advance purchase prices. The new ticket should be completely separate from the old one, to reduce the risk of cancellation after the no-show.



If the OP arranges the stopover in advance, it should all go smoothly.



When the OP checks in at Mumbai, there will be no immediate connecting flight, so the bags will naturally be checked to LHR on the first leg. When going through immigration, the OP will have a visitor visa, a plan for a few days of tourism or similar in the UK, and a ticket, consistent with that plan, for the onward flight to Atlanta.



When the OP returns to LHR for the second leg, the bags will be checked to Atlanta.



There will be some additional cost, but it is likely to be less than the cost of a new London->Atlanta ticket, especially if the new ticket has to be purchased at full fare or close to it.






share|improve this answer













This answer assumes the OP still intends to travel to Atlanta, but with a few days stay in the UK.



If the OP does not change the itinerary in advance, there could be several problems.



With only a 3 hour layover at LHR, it is very unlikely that the the OP will be able to get bags checked to LHR. It will be very similar to a "hidden city" flight, and the usual advice is carry-on only.



The OP will still have to obtain a London->Atlanta ticket for the actual day of travel. The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board. Buying the new ticket should be done in advance, so that the OP has an outgoing ticket if questioned by immigration, and for any opportunity for advance purchase prices. The new ticket should be completely separate from the old one, to reduce the risk of cancellation after the no-show.



If the OP arranges the stopover in advance, it should all go smoothly.



When the OP checks in at Mumbai, there will be no immediate connecting flight, so the bags will naturally be checked to LHR on the first leg. When going through immigration, the OP will have a visitor visa, a plan for a few days of tourism or similar in the UK, and a ticket, consistent with that plan, for the onward flight to Atlanta.



When the OP returns to LHR for the second leg, the bags will be checked to Atlanta.



There will be some additional cost, but it is likely to be less than the cost of a new London->Atlanta ticket, especially if the new ticket has to be purchased at full fare or close to it.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Oct 28 '16 at 7:33









Patricia ShanahanPatricia Shanahan

6,48422445




6,48422445












  • "The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board." BA allows no showing on their Indian originating oneway fares.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 8:29












  • @Calchas That is good news. If the ticket has that degree of flexibility, changing it to insert the stopover is likely to be free or very cheap, and will ensure delivery of the bags at Heathrow.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:44

















  • "The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board." BA allows no showing on their Indian originating oneway fares.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 8:29












  • @Calchas That is good news. If the ticket has that degree of flexibility, changing it to insert the stopover is likely to be free or very cheap, and will ensure delivery of the bags at Heathrow.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:44
















"The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board." BA allows no showing on their Indian originating oneway fares.

– Calchas
Oct 28 '16 at 8:29






"The original one is likely to be cancelled when the OP fails to board." BA allows no showing on their Indian originating oneway fares.

– Calchas
Oct 28 '16 at 8:29














@Calchas That is good news. If the ticket has that degree of flexibility, changing it to insert the stopover is likely to be free or very cheap, and will ensure delivery of the bags at Heathrow.

– Patricia Shanahan
Oct 28 '16 at 12:44





@Calchas That is good news. If the ticket has that degree of flexibility, changing it to insert the stopover is likely to be free or very cheap, and will ensure delivery of the bags at Heathrow.

– Patricia Shanahan
Oct 28 '16 at 12:44













7














You can change your ticket now.



You have a one way ticket from Mumbai to Atlanta. All of BA's (public) one way fares are at least semi-flexible, meaning you can change them for a small fee. From what I can see, there is a 5000 INR penalty for changes on the cheaper tariff. The more expensive fares have no change penalty at all. I would advise that you make the change now.



You will also have to pay the UK air passenger duty if your new itinerary includes a stop in London over 24 hours.



If you are planning not to travel onto Atlanta, you may (or may not) be entitled to a refund on the fare difference between BOM-ATL and BOM-LON. Whether you are entitled to a refund depends on the exact fare you purchased. You may find it is cheaper simply to throw away the London-Atlanta leg without formally changing the ticket.



You can (probably) change your ticket later.



Even the cheapest public BA fare on BOM-ATL permits "no showing", admittedly at a fee of 10,000 INR, meaning you can simply not show up for the second flight, and still take it on another day. The more expensive fares allow no showing and rebooking without penalty. But I wouldn't advise it without checking, in case you are travelling on a private fare from a travel agent which has more stringent conditions. On the day of travel you would have to pay the difference up to the appropriate fare offered that day, assuming there were any seats available for you.



If you don't need to go to Atlanta, you can throw away the London-Atlanta leg and forget about it.



After passport control, you can go downstairs to baggage claim, tell them you have decided not to take your onward flight and you'd like your bags back.



In this circumstance, it may take a couple of hours for your bags to be found and returned to you.






share|improve this answer

























  • The "change your ticket later" option may inconvenience other passengers, as it's possible that retrieving your bags will delay the onward flight. At very least, it will create some extra hassle for baggage handling employees. You really ought to change your itinerary as soon as you know you want to do this (it's cheaper for you anyway).

    – user35890
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:50






  • 3





    @dan1111 The bags will never be loaded if the passenger does not clear conformance ("Ready to Fly") at Terminal 5. This happens when the passenger presents his boarding pass prior to security. This is a feature unique to LHR Terminal 5. At other terminals and other airports you are correct.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:55












  • +1 for specifics of the particular case of flying from India via Heathrow on BA.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 29 '16 at 13:56















7














You can change your ticket now.



You have a one way ticket from Mumbai to Atlanta. All of BA's (public) one way fares are at least semi-flexible, meaning you can change them for a small fee. From what I can see, there is a 5000 INR penalty for changes on the cheaper tariff. The more expensive fares have no change penalty at all. I would advise that you make the change now.



You will also have to pay the UK air passenger duty if your new itinerary includes a stop in London over 24 hours.



If you are planning not to travel onto Atlanta, you may (or may not) be entitled to a refund on the fare difference between BOM-ATL and BOM-LON. Whether you are entitled to a refund depends on the exact fare you purchased. You may find it is cheaper simply to throw away the London-Atlanta leg without formally changing the ticket.



You can (probably) change your ticket later.



Even the cheapest public BA fare on BOM-ATL permits "no showing", admittedly at a fee of 10,000 INR, meaning you can simply not show up for the second flight, and still take it on another day. The more expensive fares allow no showing and rebooking without penalty. But I wouldn't advise it without checking, in case you are travelling on a private fare from a travel agent which has more stringent conditions. On the day of travel you would have to pay the difference up to the appropriate fare offered that day, assuming there were any seats available for you.



If you don't need to go to Atlanta, you can throw away the London-Atlanta leg and forget about it.



After passport control, you can go downstairs to baggage claim, tell them you have decided not to take your onward flight and you'd like your bags back.



In this circumstance, it may take a couple of hours for your bags to be found and returned to you.






share|improve this answer

























  • The "change your ticket later" option may inconvenience other passengers, as it's possible that retrieving your bags will delay the onward flight. At very least, it will create some extra hassle for baggage handling employees. You really ought to change your itinerary as soon as you know you want to do this (it's cheaper for you anyway).

    – user35890
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:50






  • 3





    @dan1111 The bags will never be loaded if the passenger does not clear conformance ("Ready to Fly") at Terminal 5. This happens when the passenger presents his boarding pass prior to security. This is a feature unique to LHR Terminal 5. At other terminals and other airports you are correct.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:55












  • +1 for specifics of the particular case of flying from India via Heathrow on BA.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 29 '16 at 13:56













7












7








7







You can change your ticket now.



You have a one way ticket from Mumbai to Atlanta. All of BA's (public) one way fares are at least semi-flexible, meaning you can change them for a small fee. From what I can see, there is a 5000 INR penalty for changes on the cheaper tariff. The more expensive fares have no change penalty at all. I would advise that you make the change now.



You will also have to pay the UK air passenger duty if your new itinerary includes a stop in London over 24 hours.



If you are planning not to travel onto Atlanta, you may (or may not) be entitled to a refund on the fare difference between BOM-ATL and BOM-LON. Whether you are entitled to a refund depends on the exact fare you purchased. You may find it is cheaper simply to throw away the London-Atlanta leg without formally changing the ticket.



You can (probably) change your ticket later.



Even the cheapest public BA fare on BOM-ATL permits "no showing", admittedly at a fee of 10,000 INR, meaning you can simply not show up for the second flight, and still take it on another day. The more expensive fares allow no showing and rebooking without penalty. But I wouldn't advise it without checking, in case you are travelling on a private fare from a travel agent which has more stringent conditions. On the day of travel you would have to pay the difference up to the appropriate fare offered that day, assuming there were any seats available for you.



If you don't need to go to Atlanta, you can throw away the London-Atlanta leg and forget about it.



After passport control, you can go downstairs to baggage claim, tell them you have decided not to take your onward flight and you'd like your bags back.



In this circumstance, it may take a couple of hours for your bags to be found and returned to you.






share|improve this answer















You can change your ticket now.



You have a one way ticket from Mumbai to Atlanta. All of BA's (public) one way fares are at least semi-flexible, meaning you can change them for a small fee. From what I can see, there is a 5000 INR penalty for changes on the cheaper tariff. The more expensive fares have no change penalty at all. I would advise that you make the change now.



You will also have to pay the UK air passenger duty if your new itinerary includes a stop in London over 24 hours.



If you are planning not to travel onto Atlanta, you may (or may not) be entitled to a refund on the fare difference between BOM-ATL and BOM-LON. Whether you are entitled to a refund depends on the exact fare you purchased. You may find it is cheaper simply to throw away the London-Atlanta leg without formally changing the ticket.



You can (probably) change your ticket later.



Even the cheapest public BA fare on BOM-ATL permits "no showing", admittedly at a fee of 10,000 INR, meaning you can simply not show up for the second flight, and still take it on another day. The more expensive fares allow no showing and rebooking without penalty. But I wouldn't advise it without checking, in case you are travelling on a private fare from a travel agent which has more stringent conditions. On the day of travel you would have to pay the difference up to the appropriate fare offered that day, assuming there were any seats available for you.



If you don't need to go to Atlanta, you can throw away the London-Atlanta leg and forget about it.



After passport control, you can go downstairs to baggage claim, tell them you have decided not to take your onward flight and you'd like your bags back.



In this circumstance, it may take a couple of hours for your bags to be found and returned to you.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Oct 28 '16 at 8:47

























answered Oct 28 '16 at 8:42









CalchasCalchas

33.3k380136




33.3k380136












  • The "change your ticket later" option may inconvenience other passengers, as it's possible that retrieving your bags will delay the onward flight. At very least, it will create some extra hassle for baggage handling employees. You really ought to change your itinerary as soon as you know you want to do this (it's cheaper for you anyway).

    – user35890
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:50






  • 3





    @dan1111 The bags will never be loaded if the passenger does not clear conformance ("Ready to Fly") at Terminal 5. This happens when the passenger presents his boarding pass prior to security. This is a feature unique to LHR Terminal 5. At other terminals and other airports you are correct.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:55












  • +1 for specifics of the particular case of flying from India via Heathrow on BA.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 29 '16 at 13:56

















  • The "change your ticket later" option may inconvenience other passengers, as it's possible that retrieving your bags will delay the onward flight. At very least, it will create some extra hassle for baggage handling employees. You really ought to change your itinerary as soon as you know you want to do this (it's cheaper for you anyway).

    – user35890
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:50






  • 3





    @dan1111 The bags will never be loaded if the passenger does not clear conformance ("Ready to Fly") at Terminal 5. This happens when the passenger presents his boarding pass prior to security. This is a feature unique to LHR Terminal 5. At other terminals and other airports you are correct.

    – Calchas
    Oct 28 '16 at 9:55












  • +1 for specifics of the particular case of flying from India via Heathrow on BA.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 29 '16 at 13:56
















The "change your ticket later" option may inconvenience other passengers, as it's possible that retrieving your bags will delay the onward flight. At very least, it will create some extra hassle for baggage handling employees. You really ought to change your itinerary as soon as you know you want to do this (it's cheaper for you anyway).

– user35890
Oct 28 '16 at 9:50





The "change your ticket later" option may inconvenience other passengers, as it's possible that retrieving your bags will delay the onward flight. At very least, it will create some extra hassle for baggage handling employees. You really ought to change your itinerary as soon as you know you want to do this (it's cheaper for you anyway).

– user35890
Oct 28 '16 at 9:50




3




3





@dan1111 The bags will never be loaded if the passenger does not clear conformance ("Ready to Fly") at Terminal 5. This happens when the passenger presents his boarding pass prior to security. This is a feature unique to LHR Terminal 5. At other terminals and other airports you are correct.

– Calchas
Oct 28 '16 at 9:55






@dan1111 The bags will never be loaded if the passenger does not clear conformance ("Ready to Fly") at Terminal 5. This happens when the passenger presents his boarding pass prior to security. This is a feature unique to LHR Terminal 5. At other terminals and other airports you are correct.

– Calchas
Oct 28 '16 at 9:55














+1 for specifics of the particular case of flying from India via Heathrow on BA.

– Patricia Shanahan
Oct 29 '16 at 13:56





+1 for specifics of the particular case of flying from India via Heathrow on BA.

– Patricia Shanahan
Oct 29 '16 at 13:56











1














As it currently stands, no. When you check in, you'll be given two boarding passes, one for BOM-LHR and one for LHR-ATL, but your luggage will be checked in for Mumbai.



Will BA be willing to replace your one ticket with two tickets covering the same legs, so you will be able to get your luggage at Heathrow? Certainly. Will they do it for free? you can ask, but airlines are famous for not doing things for free.



And three hours? If your plan is to get off the plan, go through Immigration, collect your bags, go through Customs, walk to Departures, check your bags, and get on the plane to Atlanta, three hours is just barely enough to do it safely.



If your plan is to do all that and take the Underground to Piccadilly Circus, turn around and come back, no, you don't have enough time.



If your plan is to actually see something on the island of Great Britain, other than transportation facilities.



EDIT: Patricia points out the OP is planning to extend his stay in Blighty. The airline will almost certainly charge for that.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    I think you have the trip backwards: " I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India)". The OP wants to take a multi-day layover, not see London in 3 hours.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 3:09















1














As it currently stands, no. When you check in, you'll be given two boarding passes, one for BOM-LHR and one for LHR-ATL, but your luggage will be checked in for Mumbai.



Will BA be willing to replace your one ticket with two tickets covering the same legs, so you will be able to get your luggage at Heathrow? Certainly. Will they do it for free? you can ask, but airlines are famous for not doing things for free.



And three hours? If your plan is to get off the plan, go through Immigration, collect your bags, go through Customs, walk to Departures, check your bags, and get on the plane to Atlanta, three hours is just barely enough to do it safely.



If your plan is to do all that and take the Underground to Piccadilly Circus, turn around and come back, no, you don't have enough time.



If your plan is to actually see something on the island of Great Britain, other than transportation facilities.



EDIT: Patricia points out the OP is planning to extend his stay in Blighty. The airline will almost certainly charge for that.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    I think you have the trip backwards: " I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India)". The OP wants to take a multi-day layover, not see London in 3 hours.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 3:09













1












1








1







As it currently stands, no. When you check in, you'll be given two boarding passes, one for BOM-LHR and one for LHR-ATL, but your luggage will be checked in for Mumbai.



Will BA be willing to replace your one ticket with two tickets covering the same legs, so you will be able to get your luggage at Heathrow? Certainly. Will they do it for free? you can ask, but airlines are famous for not doing things for free.



And three hours? If your plan is to get off the plan, go through Immigration, collect your bags, go through Customs, walk to Departures, check your bags, and get on the plane to Atlanta, three hours is just barely enough to do it safely.



If your plan is to do all that and take the Underground to Piccadilly Circus, turn around and come back, no, you don't have enough time.



If your plan is to actually see something on the island of Great Britain, other than transportation facilities.



EDIT: Patricia points out the OP is planning to extend his stay in Blighty. The airline will almost certainly charge for that.






share|improve this answer















As it currently stands, no. When you check in, you'll be given two boarding passes, one for BOM-LHR and one for LHR-ATL, but your luggage will be checked in for Mumbai.



Will BA be willing to replace your one ticket with two tickets covering the same legs, so you will be able to get your luggage at Heathrow? Certainly. Will they do it for free? you can ask, but airlines are famous for not doing things for free.



And three hours? If your plan is to get off the plan, go through Immigration, collect your bags, go through Customs, walk to Departures, check your bags, and get on the plane to Atlanta, three hours is just barely enough to do it safely.



If your plan is to do all that and take the Underground to Piccadilly Circus, turn around and come back, no, you don't have enough time.



If your plan is to actually see something on the island of Great Britain, other than transportation facilities.



EDIT: Patricia points out the OP is planning to extend his stay in Blighty. The airline will almost certainly charge for that.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Oct 28 '16 at 5:09









Ali Awan

10.7k105099




10.7k105099










answered Oct 28 '16 at 3:03









MalvolioMalvolio

8,1432230




8,1432230







  • 1





    I think you have the trip backwards: " I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India)". The OP wants to take a multi-day layover, not see London in 3 hours.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 3:09












  • 1





    I think you have the trip backwards: " I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India)". The OP wants to take a multi-day layover, not see London in 3 hours.

    – Patricia Shanahan
    Oct 28 '16 at 3:09







1




1





I think you have the trip backwards: " I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India)". The OP wants to take a multi-day layover, not see London in 3 hours.

– Patricia Shanahan
Oct 28 '16 at 3:09





I think you have the trip backwards: " I will be travelling to Atlanta from Mumbai(India)". The OP wants to take a multi-day layover, not see London in 3 hours.

– Patricia Shanahan
Oct 28 '16 at 3:09

















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