I must confess that I am the check in agents worst nightmare at outstations. They see me approaching with my sheaves of paper and begin to shiver with despair at what I might be about to ask.
Yes, I’m that guy – the one who books some flights with cash and others with miles. These two bookings combine to actually get me where I want to go at a price point I can afford.
Two Tickets Cause One Problem
Airlines can interline baggage which means they can send your bag on from one carrier to another. This is usually seamless and results in the passenger receiving their bag at the other end with no issues.
In the oneworld alliance, holding one ticket with several connecting flights is no problem and your bag will be checked through. Two tickets means your bag won’t be interlined and you will need to collect it and check it in again for your next flight.
This is not customer friendly and in my opinion really penalises frequent flyers. We are the ones with the savvy to be able to put together itineraries using both miles and points and our reward is having to spend extra time collecting and re-checking our hold bag.
Some Airlines Put Their Customer First
The airlines in the alliance can either conform to the rule above or do what they want. For example, Qatar Airways will interline your bag on other alliance carriers even if you have two tickets.
Qantas neatly recognise the conundrum of people booking award flights with miles and other flights with cash. They have a table which shows that an exemption applies when there are separate bookings using a combination of award travel (miles) and revenue travel (cash). Nice work!
Pain at Outstations: Part 1
Twice this year I have flown to Australia using business class tickets on sale. In April I travelled from Pisa to Auckland on Qatar Airways using a cheap cash ticket and then Auckland to Sydney on LATAM using miles.
Check-in took ages. First the agent told me that they could not through check on separate tickets. I assured him that he could. Next there were questions about what airline LATAM is. Apparently no-one got the memo about the merger between LAN and TAM and they only copped on when I mentioned LAN.
A supervisor came to assist and radio calls were made back and forth to a back office. An affirmative answer was received and eventually the bag was checked through and I even got my connecting boarding pass. Success!
Pain at Outstations: Part 2
Another sale and another visit to Australia. This time I headed from Stockholm to Auckland on Qatar Airways. Auckland to Sydney on LATAM followed on a separate ticket.
In an astonishing case of history repeating itself, my experience was almost exactly the same. “Your bag will be checked through to Auckland and you will need to check in again.” “No, please interline the bag onto LATAM.” “I don’t think we can do that, are they oneworld?”
The staff – this time provided by SAS – were very friendly throughout. I am a little more surprised at the issue though as Qatar have been flying to Stockholm for a number of years.
Should It Be This Difficult?
In short, no and there are clearly two factors at play. First, outstations may only handle one or two flights per day of the particular airline and staff will handle several carriers. That means there is a lot to remember and there could be deficiencies in training.
I also suspect that while interlining a bag across different tickets is possible, it is not easy. Each time it appears to be a lot more time consuming for the check in people even when they know what they are doing.
Overall Thoughts
Spending ten to fifteen minutes at a check-in desk waiting for the agents to work it all out does not bother me. I feel sorry for the poor passengers next in line behind me who have to cool their heels while I am served.
As a passenger I should not really know the rules better than the people serving me however this is clearly the case here. Whether it is an education issue, a systems issue or a combination of both, these need to be addressed.
It should be simple for the agent to do what they need to do and they also should know what they need to do. Have you had a similar experience or have any thoughts on what I have written? Feel free to leave a comment or question below. Thanks for reading!
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I have similar problem at Louisville airport checking my bag to Prague flying UA to ORD and then OS to VIE and PRG. Even that there was single PNR it took 40 minutes and agent has told me several times that it’s not possible … Few times calling somewhere, telling that Austrian don’t know about my reservation even I had my boarding passes already, because I had checked online before.
What was most suprising? They could check bag to VIE, so no problem between UA and OS, but not to PRG within OS. I think that it’s just problem of small airports with agents doing such job once a year …
Wow, that some amount of check-in time. I completely agree, it’s definitely much more difficult when the agent is unfamiliar with it. I guess it was good you got the bag to go most of the way but a shame it was not all the way.
I have been persistent and finally succeeded. I knew that there isn’t enough time to recheck baggage at Vienna …
That’s how you need to be – persistent! It’s the only way to get it done
Here are the 2 reasons why this is difficult: 1) Mostly of the time, the baggage tag needs to be manually generated, which means that they need to input the other flights info, such as flight number, PNR locator, and ticket number. 2) The outsourced agents, while experienced in using airline systems, may not be familiar with the more esoteric functions. Hence the “supervisor”, which is usually an employee of the airline and not outsourced local agent, would swoop in and assist.
That makes sense. It’s a shame it’s so manual though, you’d think in this day and age it could be more automated. I completely agree with the outsourced agents – no-one can know everything. It usually is the actual airline employees they refer to I’ve noticed, so you’re right there. Thanks for the comment!
Why don’t you book the tickets on the same PNR? I recently booked AMM-OMA using AA miles for the RJ AMM-ORD leg and purchased AA ORD-OMA outright. I had to call but getting both tickets on one PNR was not an issue except the $40 booking fee I had to pay and was unable to argue my way out of. While technically it isn’t necessary, as you are showing in your post, to book this way, it sure makes life easier.
You make a good point, I really should just call up and do it the way you suggest. I’d also argue my way out of the telephone booking fee. As far as I am concerned if you can’t do it online, you shouldn’t pay any fee. I will definitely give calling a try next time I do one of these trips and see what happens. Thanks for the suggestion!