Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Ryanair’s excessive fee to change name on ticket

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Ryanair is well known for punishing its passengers for their human errors. So it’s not the best airline for absent-minded professors and other people with reading and spelling difficulties. If you misspell your name on your booking, Ryanair will charge you 160 euro to correct it.

Fortunately, litigation prone Germans regularly help to make the world a better place. This time an annoyed German passenger lodged a claim against Ryanair for having to pay such an excessive fee. And he won. The court ruled that Ryanair must reimburse the passenger.

Yes Mr O’Leary, I see your hand up. What would you like to say?

PEOPLE SAY THE PASSENGER IS ALWAYS RIGHT, BUT YOU KNOW WHAT - THEY’RE ****ING NOT. SOMETIMES THEY ARE WRONG AND THEY NEED TO BE TOLD SO. AND OTHER PASSENGERS ARE NOT GOING TO GET A REIMBURSEMENT SO **** OFF.
  
Thank you Mr O’Leary, that’s enough ****’s for today.

The case was about Mr Heinz Peters, an office manager at a notary firm in the German village of Nettetal. His firm had organised an outing and they were booked on a Ryanair flight to Venice. At Weeze airport, Ryanair refused to check him in. The problem? A classic one: the name on his ticket was Heinz but the name in his passport Heinrich.

The flight was booked on Ryanair’s website by one of the firm’s PA’s. And despite the fact that the website explicitly stated that the name of the passenger must be the same as the name in the passport, the young lady just couldn’t imagine that her colleague’s official name was Heinrich. She considered him every bit a Heinz.

At check-in Ryanair showed excellent customer service by offering to change Heinz’s name on the ticket. Heinz was delighted until he was told that Ryanair would like to pocket 150 euro for this service (Heinz was lucky, currently it’s € 160).

Back from the Venice trip Heinz sued Ryanair before the local court. ‘A 150 Euro changing fee is excessive for a 10 euro ticket’, Heinz argued. Before the case was heard, Ryanair acknowledged the claim. The court then ruled that Ryanair was obliged to reimburse Heinz. Not on the basis of substantive law but on the basis of Ryanair’s acknowledgement of the claim.

Ryanair said that the problem had been entirely Heinz’ fault and reimbursement was a sign of the airline’s good will. The high fee served to prevent the resale of cheap tickets. The latter might be a defendable policy in general but in Heinz’ case there was no reason to assume that he abused the system. He, rather the young lady, had just made an error when booking the ticket.

Obviously, Ryanair wanted to prevent a substantive court decision. And they were right because it is beyond doubt that in a case like this the court would have declared Ryanair’s contract term invalid. Under European law (Article 3, Directive 93/13/EEC on unfair terms in consumer contracts) a contract term is unfair if it causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations to the detriment of the consumer. The annex to the Directive says that a term may be regarded as unfair when it requires a consumer who fails to fulfil his obligation to pay a disproportionately high sum in compensation (sub e).

Particularly when a passenger mistakenly registers under an incorrect first name or makes a small error in his surname a € 160 is excessive and therefore invalid. This goes for every ticket, regardless of whether it is sold for € 10 or for € 1000. If the contract term is invalid it is not converted into a valid one so in that case the airline is not entitled to charge the passenger anything. It goes without saying that an airline is entitled to charge a reasonable fee for changing the name on the ticket but it is likely that this cannot be more than around € 25.


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10 comments:

  1. easyJet, the other European ‘no-frills’ airline, charges € 48 for name change at the airport:
    http://www.easyjet.com/en/book/regulations.html

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  2. The auto filling software of my iPad changed incorrectly my family name when I did my booking with Ryanair. I am trying for all means to amend this error with no additional charge. So I called the Customer Service several times, I sent them countless emails and a fax showing them that I am not changing nor name neither passenger. It is only a misspelling. For some of your comments I see that to do such a correction free of charge is on a matter of luck and I am feeling hopeless and victim of injustice. I would be very happy if I don’t have to pay £110, so I appreciate any advice you might have.

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  3. I am sorry to hear this but I am afraid there is not much you can do. You booked with Ryanair so you are at their mercy to change the name on your ticket. You can take them to court but that will cost you more than £110. It may be cheaper to book a new ticket.

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  4. Thank you for replying. I was planing to email them again claiming the right as a consumer stablished by EU law that you posted. I would agree to pay £10 but £110 is just abusive and unfair. Thank you for your help.

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  5. I recently booked tickets for my wife and myself (Trieste-Stansted-Dublin return) and inserted my wife's first names + maiden name, which is how it appears on every official Italian document. Her Swiss passport, however, inserts my surname before her maiden name. (Hope this is clear so far)To correct the name would cost €110 for the first stage + £110 for the second. Both of us tried to contact the Italian Ryanair call center. We were both cut off after 8 minutes - no one having replied - and were charged €14,97 each. A friend then advised us to contact Dublin directly. On the third try we were answered by a very friendly and helpful person who told us that there was no problem since both the booking and the passport began with the same first name and ended with the same maiden name. I keep my fingers crossed that my local airport is aware of this.

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    Replies
    1. It sounds like you were lucky to find a sensible person in the Ryanair office. Hopefully all goes well at the airport!

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    2. Two sensible people, in fact. My wife phoned again, to make assurance double sure, and she was told the same thing. However, I shall let you know what happens at the airport!

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  6. Absolutely no problem. The discrepancy was never even noticed, it seems, much less queried. Phew!

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  7. Had the passenger pursued it - It should have been declared substantive and Ryanair could no longer milk passengers this way in future

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