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U.S. plans to make airlines refund fees if bags are delayed

Baggage in an airport.
Baggage from delayed travelers stacks up June 16 at Denver International Airport. The Biden administration is planning to require that airlines refund fees on checked baggage if the bags get seriously delayed.
(David Zalubowski / Associated Press)
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The U.S. Department of Transportation will propose that airlines be required to refund fees on checked baggage if the bags aren’t delivered to passengers quickly enough.

The proposal, if made final, would also require prompt refunds for fees on extras such as internet access if the airline fails to provide the service during the flight.

A department official said the agency will issue the proposal within days, and it could take effect by next summer.

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The proposal will require refunds if airlines fail to deliver a bag within 12 hours of the passenger’s domestic flight landing or within 25 hours after an international flight.

Current regulations require refunds only if bags are lost, although airlines must compensate passengers for “reasonable” incidental expenses incurred while their bags are delayed. The government does not know how often airlines keep fees when bags are significantly delayed.

The proposal is the first of several airline regulations coming from the Biden administration under an executive order that the president will soon sign, according to a senior Transportation Department official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a proposal that hasn’t been made public. The order will be designed to boost competition and give consumers more power, the official said.

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U.S. airlines want the Justice Department to send a strong message against the rise in unruly passengers with additional federal criminal charges.

Kurt Ebenhoch, executive director of consumer organization Travel Fairness Now, called the refunding of bag fees “one consumer-friendly item in a long list requiring DOT action.” He said top priorities include refunds for pandemic-related cancelations, stricter rules that would allow families with small children to sit together without paying extra and more transparency in flight schedules and fares.

John Breyault, a vice president with the National Consumers League, said Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg seems to be paying more attention to consumer issues than did Elaine Chao, who held the job during the Trump administration.

“The proof will be in the pudding whether this DOT will make consumer protection a real priority after four years of benign neglect at best, and active regulatory sabotage at worst,” Breyault said.

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Last year, more than 100,000 consumers complained to the government about airline service. Most claimed that airlines refused to give refunds to consumers who canceled trips because of the pandemic. The Transportation Department is seeking a $25.5-million fine against Air Canada but has not taken action against other carriers over refunds for canceled flights.

In 2019, the last full year before the pandemic, passengers paid U.S. airlines $5.76 billion in fees on checked bags, according to the Transportation Department. That fell to $2.84 billion last year, when travel slumped because of the pandemic. The figures do not include fees for carry-on bags.

For many years, customers could check one or two bags on almost any airline without paying a fee. That began to change during a travel slump caused by the financial crisis of 2008. Now, most U.S. airlines, other than Southwest, charge even for a single bag, although fees are usually waived for customers who buy high-fare tickets or carry the airline’s credit card.

American Airlines generated $2 billion from checked-bag fees over the past two years; Delta Air Lines and United Airlines each generated about $1.5 billion. Because of their smaller size, discount airlines, including Spirit and Frontier, reap less money but get a higher percentage of revenue from the fees.

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