Travel Guru
Established Member
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2006
- Posts
- 2,009
crow said:A TA may quote you an airfare above the actual airfare, ticket the airfare for the actual fare and keep the difference for themselves and pat themselves on the back and make the point to you that they are not charging you a service fee. Then when you query why the fare quoted and paid for was different to the ticket you are told about extra fuel charges and taxes that apply.
They then take the attitude that as you authorised the fare at the quoted price that is what you pay even if they ticket it cheaper because the quote was accidentally or purposely too high.
So you might make up extreme examples but there are plenty of examples where a TA can make plenty of extra $ from unsuspecting consumers without adequate disclosure requirements. Not by the extremes you have mentioned but by the same tactics.
There are plenty of ways agents make extra commission on bookings that due to nett fares where the gross is way above the agents sell price (determined by the individual agent) would never be discovered the the member of the public, and as an agent, i've seen them all.
Having said that, now that I look from the outside in, having left the industry, I see a sale merely as a business transaction; if we agree on a sell price on a fare to London of $2500 and its costing me $2200 nett, but through another channel I later find through I can buy the fare for $2050, then thats just business.
I would certainly never condone over grossing on airfares, which is completely illegal, but I also wouldn't suggest there should be complete transparency in the industry, after all, its none of my business what Coles is making selling me my orange juice, or what A-Mart is making selling me my joggers, so why should it be anyones business what an agent is making on a booking?
TG