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November 10th, 2009 | in Air Travel | Leave a comment

Booking your flight tickets online is a very simple and affordable process. You can save a lot of money by booking your tickets online. When you book your tickets online you don’t have to pay any commission to the travel agents.

Searching flight route – Usually the airlines website will provide the airline flight routes available. The first step is to choose a route to get to the location you wish, if necessary this can include stop over at other destinations on the way to your final location. Once you have decided on a route you must also fill in the number of passengers you plan to travel with. Children under the age of 23 months can sit on their parent lap so there is no need to book for them.

Selecting flight number- After you decide the route, then there will be many different times during the day that you can travel, you should look over the different options available to you and ensure that you select the flight with the best characteristics to suit your schedule and budget.

Entering your data- After you choose ticket(s) and prices, then the next thing you will need to do is fill in your details for the passenger manifest. The details you will need to give are your name, sex, address and telephone that could be reached. If you are traveling with multiple people you will need to fill in the details of everyone.

Payment- After filling in your personal data you will be shown your ticket booking code amount to be paid. The most common form of payment accepted by airlines is credit card. If you don’t have a credit card you can record/print the results of the booking and then pay the fare at the airline ticket counter when you get there.

Printing tickets- The process of finding or buying plane tickets online is finished, now you can simply print your ticket or record your booking code which can be presented upon check in.

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August 15th, 2009 | in Air Travel | Leave a comment

The feelings of air travelers right now can be summed up in one simple phrase: We’re mad as hell and…unfortunately we’re going to have to take it some more. These days the only thing more frustrating than flying—what with hidden fees, shrinking legroom, and slashed routes—is the infuriating realization that we travelers and the airlines are stuck with each other, at least until someone finally patents a functioning jet pack. (Really, what’s taking so long?)

Suspend your indignation for a moment and consider all this from their perspective. The airline industry is projecting $9 billion in worldwide losses this year, as costs climb and demand plummets. Between April 2008 and April 2009, overall passenger volume dropped by 11.5 percent. Carriers are responding by cutting flights (down 8.5 percent during the same period), reconfiguring cabins and classes (mostly for the worse but occasionally for the better), and, most egregiously, imposing wily new fees. Then again, why wouldn’t they? U.S. airlines collected half a billion dollars in excess-baggage fees in the final quarter of 2008 alone.

On the plus side, fares have remained relatively steady. According to industry analyst airlinefinancials.com, in 2008 the average cost for a one-way ticket on Delta was $192, this year it’s $199. And the launch of new carriers and service has brought fares down to record lows along certain routes. However, more service cuts are due this fall—reducing flights by an additional 9 percent, according to aviation-consulting firm the Boyd Group International. As capacity diminishes, standard tickets prices will surely rise. That said, airlines will be as eager as ever to fill seats—particularly in first and business class—so you’re still likely to find last-minute deals.

In some ways flying has actually become easier—for the simple fact that fewer people are doing it. Mishandled luggage declined by 23 percent in 2008. Flight delays decreased by about 5 percent year-on-year through March 2009. And security lines are commensurately shorter. “Airports are a lot less crowded, so you won’t find the chaos that characterized last year,” says Kevin Mitchell, chairman of the Business Travel Coalition, a consumer-rights organization. For travelers, that’s at least a silver lining in some decidedly cloudy skies.

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