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Airfares On The Rise As Airlines Charge Passengers For Fuel

Airfare Increase

SAMANTHA BOMKAMP   02/ 8/11 03:04 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — The rising cost of flying comes with a familiar refrain: The airlines need help paying their fuel bills.

For the first time since late 2008, U.S. airlines are adding fuel surcharges to ticket prices. They've already raised fares five times since December.to offset a 25 percent increase in the price of jet fuel. For those with spring and summer travel plans, it's a one-two punch.

Right now, the surcharges on U.S. routes are only between $3 and $5 each way. Back in 2008, surcharges started slightly higher, then jumped as high as $60 when oil hit $147 in the summer. Many estimates have oil moving slightly above $100 this year. Even a one-way $15 surcharge adds more than 4 percent to the average domestic ticket price of about $340. And on international flights, fuel surcharges at their peak can more than double the price of a ticket.

_ Adding fuel to the fare

American Airlines last week added a fuel surcharge of about $5 each way on most U.S. routes. United and Continental applied a charge of $3 each way. Others are expected to follow. JetBlue tacked on $35 to $45 for trips to the Caribbean and Puerto Rico.

Besides raising fares system-wide, individual airlines are hiking fares further on popular routes. That helps boost revenue, but airlines aren't sure it's enough. Airlines generally expect to pay at least 15 to 25 percent more for fuel this year. Estimates vary because carriers use different financial strategies for rising fuel prices. Oil topped $92 per barrel last week, the highest level since October 2008.

_ Where (and why) you'll find them

Fuel surcharges are traditionally an easier way to raise fares. An increase to a base fare isn't always tolerated by customers. They can switch to a rival or force an airline to lower fares again to keep them. Fees are complicated and can drive passengers away, too.

Airlines also believe passengers are more forgiving of price increases for specific reasons.

"I think our customer understands fuel surcharges because they see their energy costs rising as well," JetBlue Dave Barger said in an interview with The Associated Press.

_ Now you see them.

Surcharges are wrapped into the base fare on U.S. flights – you won't incur a separate fee at booking. And they must appear in all promotions and advertisements.

But on international flights fuel surcharges are often hidden during an initial fare search on online travel sites and the airlines' own websites. They can exceed the ticket price. Surcharges for international flights reached $350 on a trip to Europe in 2008. They dropped, but never went away like domestic charges did in the recession.

Fuel surcharges are labeled with an "F" code on your final booking statement of airfare and taxes. Peak travel day surcharges, which airlines introduced soon after domestic fuel fees disappeared, have a "Q" code. It's unclear whether travelers will incur both fees this summer.

_ More to come?

Few airline executives expect costs to drop this year, so travelers should prepare for higher fuel surcharges. Southwest CEO Gary Kelly said fuel will be the airline's biggest hurdle to staying profitable this year. Fuel is often an airline's biggest expense next to labor. It accounts for about one-third of an airline's total costs, on average, according to the International Air Transport Association.

Rick Seaney of FareCompare.com predicts airlines will apply fuel surcharges much more slowly this year to avoid the resistance they encountered two and a half years ago.

But that's not to say airlines wouldn't raise fuel surcharges higher than in 2008. With the economy growing and more people flying, analysts suggest that fares and fees should climb steadily this year.

"They'll keep rising until the point where the consumer says `I'm not buying a ticket anymore,'" Seaney said.

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NEW YORK — The rising cost of flying comes with a familiar refrain: The airlines need help paying their fuel bills. For the first time since late 2008, U.S. airlines are adding fuel surcharges ...
NEW YORK — The rising cost of flying comes with a familiar refrain: The airlines need help paying their fuel bills. For the first time since late 2008, U.S. airlines are adding fuel surcharges ...
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redbud9
What's fair is fair
12:42 PM on 02/10/2011
Pure crap! If the rates were truly tied to fuel prices, then you would see prices go DOWN when the cost of oil goes down, but we never do.

And to think.....airlines managed to stay in business several years ago when they didn't charge for checked luggage. That fee was also supposedly tied to fuel charges, yet no airline who instituted that charge has since rescinded it. And how about SW Airlines, how is it they can stay in business without charging for checked baggage? Easy. The other airlines are greedy bast&^ds.
02:08 PM on 02/09/2011
Airlines charge us more for luggage, more for gas, the seats are smaller, flights are fuller since they have reduced the number of flights. Good enough reason for high speed rail. Flying used to be a pleasure, now more of a nightmare.
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Stephanie71
03:39 PM on 02/09/2011
Well, if consumers didn't demand that the price of an airline ticket stay the same or be even cheaper than were 20 years ago then the cost of rising fuel would be reflected in the ticket, just like you see it reflected in the cost of food.

Southwest has been able to keep their fuel costs even because they hedge oil futures. As long as fuel prices continue to rise, this will be a winning strategy for them. Airlines that don't will have to either race to the bottom to be with Southwest in terms of amenities or raise their prices.

Sorry, you can't have a pillow, reserved seating and an upgrade to business class in exchange for a $69 ticket folks.
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07:37 PM on 02/12/2011
don't be condescending. no one is asking for $69 tickets. and I"m sorry, but how does reserved seating cost the airline anything?
01:58 PM on 02/09/2011
Fuel Surcharges are another way that ticket prices just keep rising and rising. It is surprising that these charges already exist and most consumers are not even aware of them.
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Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
01:19 PM on 02/09/2011
I wish I was Samuel L. Jackson. Then they wouldnt dare charge me for s***.
'I saved yo' mother-fu**ing plane from some mother-fu**ing snakes!'
12:37 PM on 02/09/2011
I thought that is why they were charging for bags???????
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2garen
12:23 PM on 02/09/2011
We used to travel extensively by air. Not any more, I don't like being stripped searched or having to pay to be abused.
I only travel by commercial air only when I have no other option.
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valeskas
catlover/book lover democrat
08:31 AM on 02/09/2011
We know that they cheat us out of our monies. But nobody puts a stop to it.
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ZenCrusader
trying to be more zen in a zany world.
09:54 AM on 02/09/2011
you aren't being cheated. They fly you where you want to go safely. Granted, it is often less than a civilized experience these days, but the cost of air travel is very reasonable. If you don't think so, grab some peanuts and flap your arms as fast as you can and see how far you get without the airlines.
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valeskas
catlover/book lover democrat
02:49 PM on 02/09/2011
Thank you for your funny response, its hard to flap my arms all the way to Germany. In our country I do drive but as of today, the bridges are not build across the Atlantic. I have nothing against charging for luggage, but if a flight cost me $ 1,500.00 being retired, thats quite a bit of chunck change, Safety should be already in there, because I don't think losing an airplane every 5 minutes or for that matter the personal in that airplane, is what the airlines want. Because the pilots don't want to die either. Safety is for their concern, as it is for ours, thats why, if something happens to me, my happy heirs will have to make do for the insurance money, I get for every flight. On top the attendants think we are cattle and civility from the attendants is far and in between. Its always about the shareholders and not about the passengers.
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metriks
Hillary 2008, 2012, 2016
06:32 AM on 02/09/2011
I'll ask my employer for a fuel surcharge for driving to work.
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Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
01:17 PM on 02/09/2011
Thats not a bad idea..I wish that would catch on.
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TedCollins
An Englishman living in France who loves America
03:38 AM on 02/09/2011
The competition to post the cheapest fares on aggregator websites has led to a race to the bottom in terms of service on airlines and a miserable experience for everyone.

I would gladly pay 30% more for an airline ticket if I were treated like a human being.

When will some travel entrepreneur step forward to fill this market?
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valeskas
catlover/book lover democrat
08:32 AM on 02/09/2011
They used to have charter flights to Europe, but they are not available any more. So they squeeze the last penny out of us.
12:35 PM on 02/09/2011
then fly first class
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TedCollins
An Englishman living in France who loves America
12:42 PM on 02/09/2011
I do.
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Waveskiboy
12:55 AM on 02/09/2011
No surcharge when you travel by bicycle!
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
08:47 PM on 02/12/2011
or by train.... yet.
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mad lib
12:34 AM on 02/09/2011
C'monnnn, Bullet trains!
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
06:56 PM on 02/08/2011
I priced a ticket the other day. Pleased when I found out it was only 60 euro...then learned there were 53 euro in extra fees, plus taxes...
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Jessica Ann Stallings
Alternative designer. Screw the norm.
04:52 PM on 02/08/2011
Which is why I'm driving to TX and back this summer...
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
08:48 PM on 02/12/2011
my sympathies. LOL
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SouthJerseySteve
Progressive isn't a dirty word.
04:35 PM on 02/08/2011
I'd rather pay for using the toilet than fuel charge....

{end sarcasm}
03:51 PM on 02/08/2011
so since they were already charging us for freight to begin with, this is a BS double-charge...
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avg american
It's about jobs, jobs, jobs...
12:57 PM on 02/09/2011
yep...
f&f'ed...
x2