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I recently flew with Jetstar from Cairns to Osaka on the 787. On both the outbound and return flights we paid for "up-front" seats in row 10, which cost an extra $25 each. These are bulkhead seats in the first row of economy.
Our CNS-KIX flight was cancelled less than 24 hours before departure and we were re-routed via Tokyo. The seats we had originally paid for were no longer available on the CNS-NRT flight, so we ended up with inferior seats in row 26. I was initially promised a refund over the phone for the $50 in seat selection fees paid (for 2 passengers). So you can imagine my surprise when I received an email from Jetstar a few days later saying that they would not be refunding this fee because we had still received "equivalent" up-front seats! We then sent several emails back and forth, but Jetstar refused to budge.
When checking in at Osaka for our return flight, the exact same thing happened! Our row 10 seats mysteriously became row 13 as our original seats had somehow been allocated to someone else. The check-in agent originally said I would have to call Jetstar to get a refund, but knowing they would once again fob me off I insisted on getting a refund then and there - which they eventually did agree to as a "gesture of goodwill".
This morning I received a call from Jetstar Customer Care, where they basically just explained to me that seat selection fees are non-refundable - even if you don't get the seat you paid for. The rep explained that what you're paying for is just a preference. Further, there is no guarantee that you'll receive your seating preference, and if you don't, you are apparently not entitled to a refund! I mentioned that I thought this contravened Australian Consumer Law, to which I was told it was in the terms & conditions that I agreed to when buying the ticket.
I then asked if any refund would be provided if you were moved from, say, an aisle seat in row 30 to a middle seat in row 50. The answer was "no".
I'm not even sure if this policy is legal, but either way be warned: when Jetstar says that "you'll get what you pay for", they don't really mean it!
Our CNS-KIX flight was cancelled less than 24 hours before departure and we were re-routed via Tokyo. The seats we had originally paid for were no longer available on the CNS-NRT flight, so we ended up with inferior seats in row 26. I was initially promised a refund over the phone for the $50 in seat selection fees paid (for 2 passengers). So you can imagine my surprise when I received an email from Jetstar a few days later saying that they would not be refunding this fee because we had still received "equivalent" up-front seats! We then sent several emails back and forth, but Jetstar refused to budge.
When checking in at Osaka for our return flight, the exact same thing happened! Our row 10 seats mysteriously became row 13 as our original seats had somehow been allocated to someone else. The check-in agent originally said I would have to call Jetstar to get a refund, but knowing they would once again fob me off I insisted on getting a refund then and there - which they eventually did agree to as a "gesture of goodwill".
This morning I received a call from Jetstar Customer Care, where they basically just explained to me that seat selection fees are non-refundable - even if you don't get the seat you paid for. The rep explained that what you're paying for is just a preference. Further, there is no guarantee that you'll receive your seating preference, and if you don't, you are apparently not entitled to a refund! I mentioned that I thought this contravened Australian Consumer Law, to which I was told it was in the terms & conditions that I agreed to when buying the ticket.
I then asked if any refund would be provided if you were moved from, say, an aisle seat in row 30 to a middle seat in row 50. The answer was "no".
I'm not even sure if this policy is legal, but either way be warned: when Jetstar says that "you'll get what you pay for", they don't really mean it!