How to Complain
About Your Airline Service
By Dr. Todd Curtis, The AirSafe.com Foundation
Flying as an airline passenger is an often memorable
experience, but there are times where the experience
is memorable for all the wrong reasons: mechanical
problems, poor service, bad food, lost luggage, or any
of a number of other problems that result in a
significant inconvenience or financial loss for the
passenger. If you experience this kind of problem with
your airline, you may want to deal with it by lodging
a complaint with the airline or to one of the
authorities that oversee air
transportation.
Dealing with a
Problem Immediately
Whenever you can identify a problem on the spot, your
best option will usually be to bring it to the
airline's attention and give them a chance to resolve
the issue. If you are at the airport, then contact the
airline's customer service representatives, a manager,
or some other employee who has the authority to
immediately take care of your problem. If you are in
flight, then contact the head flight attendant. For
example, if you are involuntarily bumped from your
flight due to overbooking, you are typically eligible
for some kind of compensation from the airline. If the
airline makes an offer that is acceptable, take it. If
not, make a counter offer. If you and the airline
can't come to an agreement on the counter offer, then
everyone is happy. If can't be resolved on the spot,
you should start document your experience, gather
relevant information from the airline, and prepare to
file a formal complaint. In addition to the advice
given below, there are a variety of additional
resources available through the AirSafe.com
Foundation at complain.airsafe.org.
Understand Why You
Are Complaining
After you have decided to gather information about
your situation, but before you make that phone call or
write that letter, you should take a bit of time and
get to know a few basic things about your particular
circumstances:
- 1.Why you are
complaining,
- 2. What situation
caused you to complain and what people or
organizations played a role in that
situation
- 3. What are the
things that you want to happen that will address
the complaint
- 4. What should you
reasonably expect as an outcome
It may seem obvious to
you why you want to complain and what you want to have
happen, but you have to be very specific in a
complaint to give yourself the best chance of success.
If you are not able to come up with enough relevant
details, it would be difficult for even a well meaning
airline to be able to respond appropriately. One must
also be reasonable when it comes to the expected
outcome of your complaint. You should only expect
compensation if the airline is obligated to do so. It
is beyond the scope of this article to describe every
kind of situation that may obligate the airline to
compensate you. However, following the advice in this
article will likely put you in a position to know if
your complaint may also lead to some kind of
compensation.
Taking the time to
assess your situation at the beginning will make the
rest of the complaint process as smooth as possible.
That complaint process can be roughly broken down into
the following sets of tasks: writing down the facts of
the situation, understanding whether you have a reason
to expect a response or compensation as a result of
your complaint, and filing the complaint in the places
where it can do the most good
Writing Down the
Relevant Details
If at all possible, you should take notes as soon as
possible after you realize you are in a situation
where you may want to complain to the airline. Much of
the basic information, such as your flight number, or
airport, is likely in your travel records. The most
important details are the ones that directly relevant
to your situation. If you were given substandard
service by a flight attendant, that detail may be the
name of a particular flight attendant. If your problem
were a piece of checked luggage that was lost, then
you would need any documentation that was associated
with that lost bag.
One thing to remember
is that you should stick to the factual, relevant, and
verifiable information associated with your complaint.
For example, claiming that a gate agent was, rude, and
charged you unnecessarily for an extra checked bag may
be factual and verifiable, but discussing the
inappropriate and rude behavior is not relevant if
your objective is to be compensated for an
inappropriate baggage charge.
Your efforts to
document what happen will help you to address two
fundamental issues: what is your specific complaint
and what do you expect the airline to do about it.
Know the
Rules
When you purchase a ticket, you and the airline have
entered into a contract that covers many different
situations that you may face during a flight,
including situations that are common sources of
complaints such as canceled fights and lost luggage.
No matter what the source of your complaint may be,
you should make an effort to get from your airline
documentation that provides the details of the
agreement that they have with you. This is typically
available from the gate agent or customer service
office at the airport. While it may not answer all of
your questions, it may tell you key bits of
information such as what specific aspects of the
agreement may have not been met or the address where
you may send your complaint.
Keep in mind that if
your complaint involves a potential civil or criminal
lawsuit, that you will likely have to get professional
legal advice to go forward. If it does not rise to
that level, then you will likely be able to deal
directly with the airline.
Filing a Formal
Complaint
If immediate relief is not possible, then the
complaint will likely take days or weeks to resolve
since you will likely be making a formal contact with
the airline. Be sure to keep track of any notes that
you have made, all of your travel documents (ticket
receipts, baggage check stubs, boarding passes, etc.),
as well as receipts for any out-of-pocket expenses
that you incurred.
While you may contact
one or more airline officials by phone, your chance of
getting any kind of resolution goes way up if you rely
on written communication as your primary means of
dealing with the airline. The following guidelines
will also help to get the message across more
effectively:
- If you send either
a letter or an email, make sure that your message
includes all available options for contacting you
(phone number, fax number, email address, physical
mailing address, etc.)
- Limit your initial
message to maximum one page (roughly 250
words)
- Include all of the
relevant information that the airline would need to
understand your problem
- If you incurred
expenses or monetary losses, state the amount that
you expect to be reimbursed
- Be specific about
the outcome that you want (reimbursement, other
compensation, letter of apology, etc.)
- Keep your letter
businesslike in tone
- Focus on the
facts, and provide specific information like dates,
names, and flight numbers.
- If necessary, send
copies of tickets, receipts, or other documents to
back up your claim.
- Include the names
of any employees who were rude or made things
worse, as well as anyone who might have been
especially helpful.
- Be reasonable in
any demand that you may make
If you follow these
suggested guidelines, the airline will probably treat
your complaint seriously. Your written communication
with the airline will help the airline to determine
what caused your problem, and may help the airline to
prevent the same problems from happening to others.
Contacting the U.S.
Department of Transportation
If your complaint involved a U.S. airline or a
non-U.S. airline operating in the United States, you
may want to submit your complaint with the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT). You can file a
formal complaint in one of the following
ways:
- Fill out the
online complaint form at http://www.airsafe.com/sendit.htm
and have it forwarded to the DOT by
AirSafe.com.
- Call the Aviation
Consumer Protection Division at 202-366-2220 to
record your complaint.
- Email the Aviation
Consumer Protection Division at airconsumer@dot.gov
- Mail a written
complaint to the following address:
Aviation Consumer Protection Division, C-75
U.S. Department of Transportation
400 Seventh Street, SW
Washington, D.C. 20590
You should note that
the experience of AirSafe.com has been that complaints
that are forwarded to the DOT do not generate any
useful feedback. The normal response is no feedback at
all, an automatically generated email acknowledging
receipt, or an email recommending that the information
be forwarded to another U.S. government agency. The
last response happens if the message happened to be
relevant to safety or security and the recommended
action was to contact either the FAA or the TSA.
Safety
Complaints
When you want to point out a specific situation that
you believe threatens the safety of passengers, crew,
or other members of the public, it is important that
you make the appropriate authority aware of this
situation. In the United States, that authority is the
Federal Aviation Administration. For safety issues
related to U.S. airports, to any aircraft flying in
the U.S., or to U.S. registered aircraft flying
anywhere in the world, contact the FAA at:
Assistant
Administrator for System Safety ASY-100
Federal Aviation Administration
800 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20591
You can also contact
the FAA by phone at 800-FAA-SURE (800-322-7873) or at
800-255-1111.
Security
Complaints
In the U.S., the Transportation Security
Administration is responsible for screening passengers
and baggage on U.S. flights, including checked
baggage. If your complaint involves some part of the
security process or if you suspect that a TSA
representative is responsible for the loss or damage
of an item, there are specific procedures that you
will have to follow. The following references should
provide you with the information that you
need.
TSA Claim Form
http://www.airsafe.com/issues/security/tsaclaim.pdf
TSA Claim Form
Instructions
http://www.airsafe.com/issues/security/tsaclaimi.pdf
TSA Claim Form
Supplemental Information
http://www.airsafe.com/issues/security/tsaclaim_supp.pdf
Once you have
completed the forms, keep a copy for your records and
mail the claim to the address indicated on the claim
form. You may direct other complaints and comments to
the TSA Contact Center at 866-289-9673, or
by email at tsa-contactcenter@dhs.gov.
Online
Resources
The AirSafe.com
Foundation site at complain.airsafe.org
has a number of resources related to airline
complains, including an online form for submitting a
complaint to the DOT. Visit AirSafe.org or
complain.airsafe.org for further information.
Dr. Todd Curtis is president of the
AirSafe.com Foundation and creator of the web
site AirSafe.com.
Todd Curtis conducted research in several areas of
aviation risk assessment and accident prevention.
Author of the book Understanding Aviation Safety Data
as well as a number of articles on Web site planning
and airline safety. Licensed private pilot.