helllohello
Registered User
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- 261
you can try this link but it might only be for cancelled flights. .
holiday insurance is proberly your only hope.
holiday insurance is proberly your only hope.
I have to come back on this - never once in years of flying have I had a problem getting a bag into an overhead locker on an Air Lingus flight.
Expecting a passenger to sit with their feet on their luggage is unreasonable, if not downright dangerous, I was sitting in an aisle seat and the two other passengers beside me would have found it difficult to get out in an emergency.
Even allowing for extra time on the schedules which all airlines do to some extent - adding an extra 20 minutes on top of that is downright dishonest, as is their pricing policy.
Their customer service is a joke; the company ethos seems to be to deliberately treat passengers like cattle even when it's totally unnecessary.
The point is that Ryanair have agreed to refund you for the cancelled London-Germany flight. You can still use the Dublin-London flight so why should they compensate you for a flight that you may use?Thank you for some very good posts. My point was that Ryanair cancelled the flight to Germany from London (March 2010) but I had bought tickets from Dublin to London with the aim of getting to Germany. I realise what it says in the small print but seeing as they cancelled the fligths and also could resell the seats from London I think they should bear some responsibility for the loss of the flights to London that can no longer be used
...Having sold thousands of travel policies, I am convinced that the best way to get a refund of all your flight-tickets in the circumstances of the OP, is to kill a healthy relative and make a claim on the basis you could not travel because Auntie Concepta suddenly passed away. (killing a sick relative is no use)
Or, more painful, break a leg. Your own ,not Aunt's. A sudden accident rendering travel impossible (rather than an illness) is good for claiming a refund of flights/holidays ...
Always study the fine print of insurance policies unless you have a great travel agent ,like me, that points these things out......
If the flight was with a different airline I wouldn't expect a refund. It's the fact that Ryanair cancelled the flight and offered no refund for the London Dublin flight that gets to me. Also to clear it up the flights are for MARCH 2010. I didn't miss a flight. If I missed a flight I'd pay for a new one.
You dont seem to grasp that Ryanair can't resell your seats because you could turn up with your boarding pass for a flight you've paid for.but seeing as they cancelled the fligths and also could resell the seats from London I think they should bear some responsibility for the loss of the flights to London that can no longer be used.