Hawaiian Airlines 789 Dreamliner

$700 Fare Change On “No-Change-Fee” $100 Hawaii Airfare

It’s never pleasant to have to change travel plans. How three Hawaii-centric airlines handle changes.

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56 thoughts on “$700 Fare Change On “No-Change-Fee” $100 Hawaii Airfare”

  1. Ever since Southwest started flying to Hawaii we stopped using Hawaiian airlines and their credit card. We go 2 or 3 times per year. Southwest is by far the consumer friendly airline. Changing flights is easy and if the new flight is less you get flight credit back that doesn’t expire anymore! No charge for 2 checked bags per person is reason enough to fly with them.

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    1. SWA is very customer friendly. Last min cancellations, free luggage, non-expiring credits, OK no first class, but can’t win then all.

      5
  2. Aloha!

    I had booked a LIH-LAX-LIH for the end of Aug. The fare was under $300 RT. As it turned out I had to reschedule the trip…I found some dates online later this year that would work, and the fare was only slightly more than $300. I put that trip on HOLD, and then called Hawaiian. The agent rescheduled the Aug trip for the dates that I had on HOLD, and paid the fare difference of about $57.00. The call took about 10 minutes. I anticipated that I would have to pay the fare difference, and I believe that by putting replacement flights on HOLD before I called made it easier to reschedule.

    Mahalo!

    Lynn

    9
  3. We have flown with Alaska Air since Aloha Airlines went out of business. We used to own a home on the Big Island so a lot of back and forth. Never have had a problem!!!
    So far they are Awesome! In all the years we have had only one delay due to ice on the wings in the mainland. I have their credit card and get amazing discounts. 1 bag free for every person In my party. The picture above is misleading, should have been a Hawaiian Airlines plane.

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  4. I have a very similar experience with Hawaiian Airlines. I found out the hard way that “no change fees” means they just charge you in less transparent methods not explicitly stated on the website. Rebooking is limited to “rebooking” fares only (often much higher fares than the online flight search results). If you rebook to an itinerary that costs less (e.g. change from transpacific to interisland), you lose the fare difference. If you’re taking to an agent that talks slow, the low fare may increase back to a high fare while they’re talking. I tried to file a complaint with their customer service, but didn’t get anywhere. I then filed a BBB complaint, where they were more responsive, but still don’t seem to be getting anywhere. Beware!

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  5. We booked a flight to Kona with a 1-hour layover in Honolulu. Hawaiian Airlines then changed his flight schedule, creating a 3-hour layover. With interisland flights pretty much leaving every hour, we tried to book an earlier flight to Kona. After all, there were two other flights…each one with seats available. The fee to change? An extra $900 for two of us. Yup. That is even though HA (not us) changed the flight schedule. And, like many of you experienced HA‘s customer service was useless. The agent was not helpful, and the IT system was slow. Sticking with the “new” 3-hour layover, we are quite disappointed with Hawaiian Air.

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    1. That’s awful!!! I loved Aloha Airlines for interisland flights; Hawaiian has been an 800-pound gorilla for too long and have forgotten what customer service is. Having Southwest should cause them to make changes or suffer the consequences.

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    2. I just learned that it’s a Federal law that if they change your flight significantly that you can cancel and get a refund. Reasonable airlines should also work with you (meaning no charging if there’s a higher fare difference in a new flight that you want to now take, even on a diff day to avoid the customer wanting a refund).

      4
  6. This is the same thing that happened to me with Hawaiian Airlines. It would’ve cost me just as much to change my flights as to purchasing new tickets. So I forfeited my tickets and purchased new ones, due to a change in dates for a funeral that I needed to attend. Why do we have to pay more than what we paid for our tickets in the first place to make a change. Isn’t it supposed to be lesser than the usual cost.

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  7. Aloha-From the photo, one would get the implication that Alaska is the airline that charged you $700. Any reasoon why yuo didn’t show a Hawaiian plane?

    thanks

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    1. Hi Jon.

      It was a discussion about Hawaiian, Alaska, and Southwest, the Hawaii centrists. The photo includes Alaska, Hawaiian, and United. We didn’t have and couldn’t find a photo with all three. And honestly we just try to keep the photos mixed and interesting. Thanks for the input and more than 100 comments.

      Aloha.

      5
  8. Not surprised with your Hawaiian Air experience.
    This past Feb we flew HA First Class on 6 segs starting in Las Vegas and ending at JFK. We needed to change the first segment & the fare was $1,000 per person less but they refused to issue a credit. Subsequently we made a change to one of the inter Island segments and they charged us $59 per person additional. The agent refused to apply the fare reduction against the new charges. Upon returning I wrote to HA and they credited the $59 to my CC + a $100. voucher for future travel. Have yet to receive my full mileage credit on DL Skymiles from HA 6 months later. Needless to say they can keep their $100 vouchers as I will not fly with them again. They are not consumer friendly.

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  9. Pre Covid I had booked to fly round trip Hilo to Brisbane, Australia. Cost of round trip was $1100. Finally able to rebook, the new fare was $2300. No change fee, as such, but I didn’t like having to pay more than double the original fare. If I want to do the same trip this Christmas the fare will be $3500! I won’t be going.

    6
    1. Wow Wendy, that’s a crazy price though it would be summer there which is understandable. We paid $1300 pp in April with Hawaiian roundtrip from San Jose, Ca to Sydney but then again, it was their wintertime. Still was a great trip. It was cheaper for us to fly from the West Coast to Sydney than it was to break up the reservation and fly just from HI to Australia. Hope you get there eventually at a reasonable cost.

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