Advice: re pursuing possible misleading Economy X pricing display on Virgin website

eastwest101

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Hello all,

I have started a minor dispute with Virgin about the advertised price of some Economy X seats that were selected and paid on the evening of the 31st of October 2024, just two passengers on a one-way domestic economy booking on the Virgin website. Long story short, there was some sort of Virgin promotion for a limited time where Economy X seats were reduced from $50 ea in this case to $15 ea., it must have been a wider promotion for Economy X and this promo apparently ended on the 28th Oct. but as described below was still appearing on the evening of the 31st October.

My screenshot below was taken during the booking process: (unfortunately this is the only screenshot I took and for future reference, this is a learning exercise to be able to take much larger and more complete screenshots in the future as airlines try to rely on tricky T&C that may not appear on the booking site itself but might reside on a different page - see further below).

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I genuinely wouldn't have considered paying the $50 ea for a 1hr 45min flight but at $15 ea I thought it was a pretty good price. I did notice that the fare was calculated and then priced with the $50 Economy X fee during booking but thought that it would have just been a Virgin website bug or the maybe correct price would be calculated further on in the booking, hence me taking the screenshot. As it was late at night I thought I would be on fairly good ground to get this error corrected in the next few days as I doubted that calling the call centre at 10pm would have resulted in a satisfactory result.

The next day I noticed that I had been charged the Economy X seating charge of $50 ea for these two passengers and called the Virgin call centre to ask for the difference between the advertised Economy X price and the actual price that was charged to my credit card along with the fares. I was requesting the difference between the usual Economy X fee of $50 and what I believed would be the reduced price of $15. Pretty simple routine request you would think?

This first call resulted in the agent eventually hanging up/or becoming disconnected, so I tried the HUCA method. This second attempt resulted in an explanation from the call centre that the reduced $15 Economy X fee was for exit rows only. At this point, I decided that this might be better pursued by more official channels with better documentation, so I started this process by using the customer feedback form on the Virgin website.

In my claim/dispute, I was clear that I only wanted a refund for the price difference between the advertised Economy X fee and what was charged to my credit card. As I intend to take these flights and the Economy X fee is included in the one Fare transaction with Virgin I didn't want to go down the dispute process with my credit card yet, as its only a partial refund that I'm seeking and don't want to reverse the entire transaction.

Anyway - as a result of this first claim Virgin came back with the following response:


Dear Eastwest101,

Thank you for your email regarding your refund request. We acknowledge the importance of having this organised.
We have reviewed your reservation and can confirm that you made a purchase for your Economy X seat on the 31st of October 2024. Please be aware that our $15.00 AUD Economy X seat is only applicable for new bookings or when managing existing Eligible Flight bookings made between October 21 and October 28, 2024, through www.virginaustralia.com. or via the Guest Contact Centre.


We would like to let you know that we cannot issue any refunds as this is a limited time offer. For more details, please see our Economy X page on our website. Please note that pre-reserved seating is subject to availability and is not guaranteed. Seats may be changed by Virgin Australia for operational or safety reasons at their discretion. Thank you for taking the time to contact Virgin Australia, Marcus. Your utmost understanding is greatly appreciated.
Kind regards,



So my response again was an email to them with the same screenshot, with the suggestion that the offer period may have been limited to the 28th October but (probably due to an error on Virgin's website this reduced Economy X advertising) this price still appeared in the booking page on the 31st Oct). I pointed them to the relevant sections of ACCC guidance about errors in advertised prices, in the case of the merchant offering erroneous or out-of-date prices the advertised and displayed price must be honoured and asked for a review of this decision:

The next response from Virgin was this:


Dear Eastwest101,

Thank you for your email response.

Please note that our $15.00 AUD Economy X seat offer is only valid between 21st October and 28th October 2024. There is no price mismatch on the website as we need to follow our rules for offering promotions to our guests so they can purchase it within a limited time.

Moreover, even if you saw that there was a discount listed on the time and date of your purchase, you still missed the promo period. We can't guarantee if there are any discounted Economy X seats available at that time.

As much as we want to help you, we would like to inform you that we are unable to issue any refunds as this is a limited-time promotion. For further information, kindly refer to our Economy X page on our website.

Please be aware that pre-reserved seating is subject to availability and cannot be guaranteed. Virgin Australia may change seats for operational or safety reasons at their discretion. The dynamic nature of seat availability and pricing necessitates real-time updates, and these may change without prior notice.

We need to follow our rules for offering promotions to our guests so they can purchase it within a limited time.

Thank you for taking the time to email us, Marcus. Your utmost understanding is greatly appreciated.


Kind Regards, Virgin Ausrtalia


So they haven't been rude about it or anything, but they seem to be trying to construct some sort of specious argument on several fronts along with a bit of general irrelevant info and standard template copy-and-paste responses that don't address the relevant issue:

Are they trying to argue that:

1. Somehow that dynamic pricing and subject to availability exclude them from price display consumer law.
2. Somehow limited-time promotions exempt them from consumer law to the point where refunds are refused? not relevant in this case but seems to be on very shaky ground if they are trying to make such an argument?

I know this is only a matter of around $35 ea, but its really the principle of the thing to me now, and not reading and understanding the complaint that has got me thinking about how to pursue this while still being able to take the booked flights. Is this really such a slam dunk case of an error in price display by the merchant, or are their T&C's elsewhere in the website able to sidestep this? Is something like the Wayback machine going to be any help in this situation?

I haven't even considered the Airline Consumer Advocate due to its reputation, but have raised a dispute with my local QLD Dept of Fair Trading office with the initial back and forth, I will need to append the second response to that, but before I spend too much time, does anyone have any suggestions about how to resolve this and what other course of actions are open? Just want a reality check if there is something obvious I have missed?

Thanks very much if anyone has any suggestions. Or even a standard formal email or response or other course of action that might get their attention and get them to move on this.

Mods - feel free to move to a more relevant discussion forum if this isn't the correct place.
 

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To provide you with another analogy, suppose you find a nice pair of jeans at a department store and turn over the price tag and it says from $15 but then when you ring it up the total is $50, would that be considered legal under Australian Consumer law?
Well what has actually happened here is that the OP was looking through a clothes rack of jeans which were marked 'From $15 and up'. The OP selected a pair of jeans which had a price tag of $50 but didn't check carefully enough. The OP then went to pay at the register for the jeans and other a few other items and when scanning the jeans it popped up as $50 on the register, the OP thought it was a bug with the store's register. It wasn't until the OP got home and checked the receipt and the price tag that OP realised they had selected and bought a $50 pair of jeans.

Anyway, some people like to be contrarian just for the sake of it....
 
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Well what has actually happened here is that the OP was looking through a clothes rack of jeans which were marked 'From $15 and up'. The OP selected a pair of jeans which had a price tag of $50 but didn't check carefully enough. The OP then went to pay at the register for the jeans and other a few other items and when scanning the jeans it popped up as $50 on the register, the OP thought it was a bug with the store's register. It wasn't until the OP got home and checked the receipt and the price tag that OP realised they had selected and bought a $50 pair of jeans.

Anyway, some people like to be contrarian just for the sake of it....
This is getting absurd.
 
Just to close this out, I had my State Dept of Fair Trading come back after some back and forth between them and a Virgin representative, with an offer from Virgin for a "goodwill gesture" of the value of the difference plus a small amount for my time. The more important "win" for me is seeing if the changed and improved version of the Economy X seating selection page during the booking process sticks as it is with clear and more transparent prices and selection options......

This was a fairly quick process in the end and although all the detail is not included, it's nice that the person responsible in the QLD Dept of Fair Trading included some of the comments from the airline representative in their response showing their reasoning. (my redactions of personal data and names).



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