It’s absolutely the passenger’s problem! All the airline has to do is cancel the ticket, right or wrong. Nothing the passenger can do at that point in time. You can’t go instantly to the DOT.I'm with you ... just keep going. Their problem not yours!
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You can’t ‘merge’ tickets/PNRs, but you can link them
Oh! That’s interesting! Why are we always told by airlines that you can’t combine/merge separate bookings then? And all we can do is link them?You can merge tickets/PNRs, manually, if you really wanted to (for a valid reason). The problem is usually finding someone who knows how to do it.
Could it be that pnr merging is only doable when the booking is under airport control?Oh! That’s interesting! Why are we always told by airlines that you can’t combine/merge separate bookings then? And all we can do is link them?
A valid reason would be two separate award bookings, for example, to benefit from a through fare, or to combine two separate bookings in the same airline to benefit from protections in the event of a missed connection.
Think of a PNR as an envelope into which can be inserted one or more bookings such as hotel stays, train travel, flight tickets, transfers etc.Oh! That’s interesting! Why are we always told by airlines that you can’t combine/merge separate bookings then? And all we can do is link them?
Yes, i get that, I was just confused by ‘merging tickets’. I know multiple pax can be on the same PNR, and if one decides not to travel, you split the PNR etc.Think of a PNR as an envelope into which can be inserted one or more bookings such as hotel stays, train travel, flight tickets, transfers etc.
An example of a common situation with more than one ticket in a PNR, can be a simple 2 PAX airline booking. It will have one PNR "containing" two tickets; one ticket (number) for each passenger.
Being pedantic, there is no merging of two flight tickets into a single flight ticket. I am not aware if that is even possible.Yes, i get that, I was just confused by ‘merging tickets’. I know multiple pax can be on the same PNR, and if one decides not to travel, you split the PNR etc.
But having two PNRs, separate tickets for the same passenger, we’ve always been told ‘can’t do’ if asking whether you can merge the two tickets to create a single ticket.
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Through check baggage is one reason.If we can simply merge separate tickets into one PNR, but not actually merge two tickets into one, what’s the advantage of it?
Yes, maybe the terminology is getting confused.Being pedantic, there is no merging of tickets in to another ticket. I am not aware if that is even possible.
In this particular case, "Merging Tickets" does not accurately describe the process, which was moving a ticketed flight booking from one PNR into another PNR.
A competent Travel Agent can do this with just about any PNR they control.
However, airlines appear not to like you doing this on their bookings, although I suspect there is more flexibility day of travel such as happened here.
Through check baggage is one reason.
Also, OP, how did you go in the end?
it makes no difference if you do it now, or at check-in at the airport.
Just hand the check-in agent the PNR for the second trip.
The check-in agent probably won’t even know it’s there unless you mention it anyway. So I’d save the time and hassle now.
Qantas check-in systems have a 'find connection' button that shows to the agent pretty quickly if there if a Qantas flight booked with the same name / FF number etc onward from the last port of arrival on ticket #1 and allows through-check. Saves a lot of time and they seem to prefer to do this as it takes the load off the connections desks at the arrival airport as your bag will already be tagged correctly.I did it the other day with QF out of JFK (JFK-AKL and AKL-SYD-OOL), two separate bookings. I didn't even have to give my second booking reference, a few clicks and the bag tags and BPs printed out. I hadn't even asked QF to link them before travel.