About Travel Industry

BNET Travel provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives into all aspects of the travel and tourism industry. In addition to detailed airline and hotel company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new travel and carrier routes, bankruptcies, mergers, tourism figures, investments and a host of other important business issues.

Flyers Sour on Alaska's Checked-Bag Fee

By Bryan Corliss | Apr 27, 2009

Alaska Airlines announced last week it will start charging each passenger $15 for their first checked bag, a move that’s not sitting well with frequent passengers of the Seattle-based airline.

Alaska was slow to adopt checked-bag fees, and it announced the move after reporting a quarterly loss of $19.2 million to start the year — a loss that would have been even worse but for a one-time gain related to savings from hedging on fuel. The  new charge will take effect July 7.

In exchange for the new charge, Alaska and Horizon will guarantee passengers that luggage will be at baggage claim 25 minutes after their flight parks at the gate. If it isn’t, passengers will get 2,500 frequent-flier miles or $25 off a future flight.

The plan is being widely panned by regular fliers of Alaska, who say it’s altogether likely that it will result in more passengers trying to cram more oversize carry-on bags into overhead bins, which will only make the airline’s sub-par on-time record even worse.

And some Seattle fliers — particularly those logging in to comment at SeattleTimes.com — are threatening to switch to Southwest Airlines, which competes with Alaska on about half of its West Coast routes, and doesn’t charge for bags.

Bryan Corliss has been a business journalist for almost two decades, and has won national awards for reporting on topics as varied as agriculture and aerospace. He most recently was at Washington CEO magazine in Seattle, where he wrote a weekly online newsletter tracking the Pacific Northwest economy.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Travel Roundup: Checked-Bag Fees Stay, Cruise Ship Investigation, Kansas Amtrak Study and More

    BNET Insight - 329 days 15 hours 49 minutes ago

    Checked-bag fees likely to stay — The checked-bag fee was originally created to offset the price of oil, but now it’s being used to offset the economy. Despite passenger complaints, customers are still paying airlines around $15 for the first checked bag and $25 for the second. With an estimated $4 billion loss for the industry in 2008,...

  • Southwest Says Passengers Flee Bag Fees

    BusinessWeek - 40 days 14 hours 7 minutes ago

    By Justin Bachman The $15 you fork over at the airport to check a suitcase helps a financially ailing airline's bottom line. Perhaps it persuades some families to drive instead. But can this $15—and the other fees airlines are piling on—be prompting passengers to switch airlines? That, at least, is what some fee-less airlines are reading...

  • Airline Fee: Pay United $249, Free Checked-Bags for a Year

    FareCompare - 48 days 19 hours 54 minutes ago

    Here’s a new “bag fee” plan, with a twist: United Airlines now has a new “subscription fee” for checked-bag charges, called Premier Baggage, and it works like this: Pay $249 a year, and you get to check two bags per flight, everytime you fly for a year - plus, the fee also covers up to 8

  • Ryanair raises bag fees, permits second piece

    ATW Daily News - 80 days 12 hours 17 minutes ago

    Ryanair announced an increase in its baggage fees effective Oct. 1 on the heels of a 20% drop in the average fare this year to €32 ($45.70). It also will allow passengers to check a second bag. Each of the two bags will have a 15-kg. limit. The first will cost £/€30 if checked in at the airport or £/€15 on the Internet and the second...

  • Avoid Airline Bag Fees with Special Ski Package

    FareCompare - 14 days 17 hours 53 minutes ago

    Here’s one solution to airline bag fees: Vail Resorts, which owns Vail, Beaver Creek, Keystone, and Breckenridge in Colorado, plus Heavenly by Lake Tahoe - is offering a package that includes free skis and/or boards. Which means you don’t have to mess with checked-bag fees - or, the very pricy overweight bag fees. The package also includes

 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    Scottas66

    04/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Flyers Sour on Alaska's Checked-Bag Fee

    I particularly love how Alaska's "Baggage Service Guarantee" only lasts until December.

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement