Can I book a two leg trip but only use the second leg? [duplicate]
This question already has an answer here:
Consequences of not showing up for one leg of journey
1 answer
Do you have to take the second leg of a domestic flight?
9 answers
I'm looking to book a quick one way trip from nyc to Pittsburgh. The nonstop flights are all around $300. When I try out of Hartford, ct...I get a flight for $150 leaving Hartford with one stop in Newark. When I check the same exact Newark flight...its $300.
My question is...could I book the Hartford-Newark-Pittsburgh flight...but just get dropped off at Newark for the second leg, since I live closer to nyc than Hartford. To save half the price.
Are there any issues or rules against this?
Thanks
tickets
marked as duplicate by Michael Hampton, JonathanReez♦, CGCampbell, Mark Mayo♦ Jul 17 '16 at 2:25
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
Consequences of not showing up for one leg of journey
1 answer
Do you have to take the second leg of a domestic flight?
9 answers
I'm looking to book a quick one way trip from nyc to Pittsburgh. The nonstop flights are all around $300. When I try out of Hartford, ct...I get a flight for $150 leaving Hartford with one stop in Newark. When I check the same exact Newark flight...its $300.
My question is...could I book the Hartford-Newark-Pittsburgh flight...but just get dropped off at Newark for the second leg, since I live closer to nyc than Hartford. To save half the price.
Are there any issues or rules against this?
Thanks
tickets
marked as duplicate by Michael Hampton, JonathanReez♦, CGCampbell, Mark Mayo♦ Jul 17 '16 at 2:25
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
With most airlines, No. When you fail to check in for the first leg they cancel the rest of the ticket. This question is likely going to be closed as a duplicate as it has been asked and answered here before.
– Willeke♦
Jul 16 '16 at 19:01
@JonathanReez not a dupe, yours is asking about not taking the second leg, this is asking about ONLY taking the second leg. There's a distinct difference in airline behavior for each case.
– Mark Mayo♦
Jul 17 '16 at 2:24
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
Consequences of not showing up for one leg of journey
1 answer
Do you have to take the second leg of a domestic flight?
9 answers
I'm looking to book a quick one way trip from nyc to Pittsburgh. The nonstop flights are all around $300. When I try out of Hartford, ct...I get a flight for $150 leaving Hartford with one stop in Newark. When I check the same exact Newark flight...its $300.
My question is...could I book the Hartford-Newark-Pittsburgh flight...but just get dropped off at Newark for the second leg, since I live closer to nyc than Hartford. To save half the price.
Are there any issues or rules against this?
Thanks
tickets
This question already has an answer here:
Consequences of not showing up for one leg of journey
1 answer
Do you have to take the second leg of a domestic flight?
9 answers
I'm looking to book a quick one way trip from nyc to Pittsburgh. The nonstop flights are all around $300. When I try out of Hartford, ct...I get a flight for $150 leaving Hartford with one stop in Newark. When I check the same exact Newark flight...its $300.
My question is...could I book the Hartford-Newark-Pittsburgh flight...but just get dropped off at Newark for the second leg, since I live closer to nyc than Hartford. To save half the price.
Are there any issues or rules against this?
Thanks
This question already has an answer here:
Consequences of not showing up for one leg of journey
1 answer
Do you have to take the second leg of a domestic flight?
9 answers
tickets
tickets
asked Jul 16 '16 at 18:59
BozBoz
111
111
marked as duplicate by Michael Hampton, JonathanReez♦, CGCampbell, Mark Mayo♦ Jul 17 '16 at 2:25
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by Michael Hampton, JonathanReez♦, CGCampbell, Mark Mayo♦ Jul 17 '16 at 2:25
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
With most airlines, No. When you fail to check in for the first leg they cancel the rest of the ticket. This question is likely going to be closed as a duplicate as it has been asked and answered here before.
– Willeke♦
Jul 16 '16 at 19:01
@JonathanReez not a dupe, yours is asking about not taking the second leg, this is asking about ONLY taking the second leg. There's a distinct difference in airline behavior for each case.
– Mark Mayo♦
Jul 17 '16 at 2:24
add a comment |
With most airlines, No. When you fail to check in for the first leg they cancel the rest of the ticket. This question is likely going to be closed as a duplicate as it has been asked and answered here before.
– Willeke♦
Jul 16 '16 at 19:01
@JonathanReez not a dupe, yours is asking about not taking the second leg, this is asking about ONLY taking the second leg. There's a distinct difference in airline behavior for each case.
– Mark Mayo♦
Jul 17 '16 at 2:24
With most airlines, No. When you fail to check in for the first leg they cancel the rest of the ticket. This question is likely going to be closed as a duplicate as it has been asked and answered here before.
– Willeke♦
Jul 16 '16 at 19:01
With most airlines, No. When you fail to check in for the first leg they cancel the rest of the ticket. This question is likely going to be closed as a duplicate as it has been asked and answered here before.
– Willeke♦
Jul 16 '16 at 19:01
@JonathanReez not a dupe, yours is asking about not taking the second leg, this is asking about ONLY taking the second leg. There's a distinct difference in airline behavior for each case.
– Mark Mayo♦
Jul 17 '16 at 2:24
@JonathanReez not a dupe, yours is asking about not taking the second leg, this is asking about ONLY taking the second leg. There's a distinct difference in airline behavior for each case.
– Mark Mayo♦
Jul 17 '16 at 2:24
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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No. On a multi-leg flight ticket (return or multi-city), when you don't show up for any leg of the itinerary, the whole ticket is cancelled. So in practice you can only skip the last leg (or several legs at the end of a multi-city flight) of the flight (for example the return portion of a round-trip ticket).
Wow. That seems wrong to me.
– Boz
Jul 16 '16 at 21:15
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
No. On a multi-leg flight ticket (return or multi-city), when you don't show up for any leg of the itinerary, the whole ticket is cancelled. So in practice you can only skip the last leg (or several legs at the end of a multi-city flight) of the flight (for example the return portion of a round-trip ticket).
Wow. That seems wrong to me.
– Boz
Jul 16 '16 at 21:15
add a comment |
No. On a multi-leg flight ticket (return or multi-city), when you don't show up for any leg of the itinerary, the whole ticket is cancelled. So in practice you can only skip the last leg (or several legs at the end of a multi-city flight) of the flight (for example the return portion of a round-trip ticket).
Wow. That seems wrong to me.
– Boz
Jul 16 '16 at 21:15
add a comment |
No. On a multi-leg flight ticket (return or multi-city), when you don't show up for any leg of the itinerary, the whole ticket is cancelled. So in practice you can only skip the last leg (or several legs at the end of a multi-city flight) of the flight (for example the return portion of a round-trip ticket).
No. On a multi-leg flight ticket (return or multi-city), when you don't show up for any leg of the itinerary, the whole ticket is cancelled. So in practice you can only skip the last leg (or several legs at the end of a multi-city flight) of the flight (for example the return portion of a round-trip ticket).
answered Jul 16 '16 at 19:34
yannnyannn
1,185723
1,185723
Wow. That seems wrong to me.
– Boz
Jul 16 '16 at 21:15
add a comment |
Wow. That seems wrong to me.
– Boz
Jul 16 '16 at 21:15
Wow. That seems wrong to me.
– Boz
Jul 16 '16 at 21:15
Wow. That seems wrong to me.
– Boz
Jul 16 '16 at 21:15
add a comment |
With most airlines, No. When you fail to check in for the first leg they cancel the rest of the ticket. This question is likely going to be closed as a duplicate as it has been asked and answered here before.
– Willeke♦
Jul 16 '16 at 19:01
@JonathanReez not a dupe, yours is asking about not taking the second leg, this is asking about ONLY taking the second leg. There's a distinct difference in airline behavior for each case.
– Mark Mayo♦
Jul 17 '16 at 2:24