Alex O'Brien
Travel Tips

Airline complaints rise even as more planes arrive on time

More US flights are arriving on time and airlines are losing fewer bags, yet more consumers are complaining about air travel.

Traveller complaints jumped 34 per cent last year, to the highest level since 2000. The top frustration is problem flights including cancellations and delays, which is unchanged in 16 years.

"Everything is getting better, but they are still unhappy about the same things,'' says Dean Headley, a marketing professor at Wichita State and co-author of an annual report on airline quality. He thinks passengers resent the growth in extra fees for things like checked baggage and changing or cancelling a reservation, and that makes them quicker to complain when something goes wrong with their trip.

The report by Headley and Brent Bowen, dean of the aviation school at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, is being released Monday (local time). The researchers use publicly available information from the US Department of Transportation to rate the airlines for on-time performance, baggage handling, bumping passengers because of oversold flights, and complaints filed with the government.

Among the findings in this year's report:

It was the fifth increase in complaints in six years. Still, more than 670 million people flew on US carriers last year, so only a tiny slice bothered to complain to the government. Many more gripe directly to the airline. Frontier chief executive Barry Biffle has said that his airline gets about 30 complaints for every one filed with the Transportation Department and it used to be a 90-to-1 ratio.

Complaints to the government topped 20,000 in 2000 but dropped sharply after the terror attacks of September 2001, which resulted in fewer people flying. Complaints didn't start rising again until 2004.

There are serious students of the airline industry who dismiss reports like the one from Wichita State and Embry-Riddle.

Brett Snyder, who writes the Cranky Flier blog, says the overall rankings don't tell travellers whether an airline is good or bad at what matters to them.

"It lumps everything together in a way that doesn't make sense for most travellers,'' Snyder says. "You should research what matters to you. If you're flying a specific route, you can look at on-time performance on that route.''

Each month the Transportation Department lists flights that are chronically delayed and provides on-time figures for each airline at specific airports.

Written by David Koenig. First appeared on Stuff.co.nz.

Related links:

10 USA destinations with spectacular scenery

12 packing tips to travel with one suitcase

The best way to carry travel documents

Tags:
travel, flying, Airlines, Complaints