Let me elaborate. A report titled The Sky's the Limit, by a United States (US) Senate sub-committee on the airline industry's practice of "unbundling"—as many charges as possible in a way that these ancillary fees have become a critical revenue stream—criticises carriers for levying new charges besides ticket price. Be it seat preference, food, water, or check-in baggage, extra charges are being levied for virtually anything.
This strategy, known as unbundling, has spread to almost every airline. The so-called ancillary fees have become a vital revenue stream. According to the report, unbundling has "insidiously raised the cost of flying" for consumers, forcing them to pay to be seated next to their minor children or have carry-on luggage.
The report argues that US-based airlines like United, Delta, Spirit, Frontier and American Airlines have generated billions of dollars in revenue from ancillary fees while travellers confront increasingly complex fees, with fewer options for avoiding them, obscuring the total cost of travel. The report says that the five airlines collectively earned $12.4 billion in revenue from seat charges between 2018 and 2023 and that, in 2023, United earned $1.3 billion, more than the $1.2 billion it earned from carry-on baggage fees.
This story is from the January 10, 2025 edition of Hindustan Times Lucknow.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the January 10, 2025 edition of Hindustan Times Lucknow.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
India Prepares for Tricky Trade Dance with Trump
Easier access likely for more American goods, but no unilateral tariff cuts
CCPA Issues Notices to Ola, Uber on Differential Pricing
The Notices to the Ride-Hailing Platforms Came After Consumer Complaints and Viral Social Media Posts
Controversial social media bill gets parl nod
Pakistan's lower house of parliament on Thursday passed a controversial bill that will give the government sweeping controls on social media, including sending users to prison for spreading disinformation.
Spare the H-1B visa programme
America's labour worries are structural, and have very little to do with immigrants
Insurance merger on hold, govt may pick one for sale
The Centre may drop its plan to merge three general insurers and instead pick one of them for privatisation this fiscal year, two people aware of the development said.
Two From Uttar Pradesh Among Those Killed in Pushpak Tragedy
Among the deceased in the freak train accident that left at least 13 people dead was Nasiruddin Badaruddin Sidhiquie, 20, from Gonda.
Pak ISI's Visit to Dhaka Signals Sudden Shift in Military Ties
There Have Been Several High-Level Contacts Between the Two Countries in Recent Weeks
Oppn hits out at NC chief over Article 370 remarks
A political row erupted on Thursday over National Conference (NC) president Farooq Abdullah's claims that Article 370 was formulated to protect the Dogras in Jammu and not Kashmiris.
Terror Funding Case: HC Seeks NIA Reply on Plea of Engineer Rashid
The Delhi high court on Thursday issued notice on a plea by Engineer Rashid, an MP from Jammu & Kashmir, seeking directions to the city court to pronounce orders on his bail plea in a terror-funding case.
Inquiry begins to find trigger for freak Jalgaon train tragedy
A curve on the tracks was likely one of the main factors behind the freak Jalgaon train incident, as it obstructed the line of sight of one of the drivers and limited the time he had to apply emergency brakes, officials aware of the matter said on Thursday as authorities began investigating the trigger for the incident.