^THISWhen everything goes well, they're fine as long as you pay attention to their rules. If things go wrong, there is usually no way to recover. Personally I won't use them for events that it would really hurt me to miss. But for a quick getaway or trip that you won't be heartbroken if it falls apart, I'd do it.
This is exactly what I meant about knowing and following the rules. What we think of as standard carryon sizes are actually oversized. The ULCCs enforce those rules that the legacy carriers generally don't.Frontier and Spirit nickel and dime you on everything. The initial airfare may look tempting, but once you add an assigned seat, bags (both carry on and checked) and refreshments you are nearly the same price as a legacy carrier.
That being said, I flew them in May from Milwaukee to pick up my kittens in Denver. I only had a backpack that held the collapsible pet carrier and a water bottle. The gate agent size checked every single bag as we boarded. I was fine, but she caught a number of people who were oversized a bit and they were forced to pay an exorbitant fee for their carry on that was only slightly too big. The entire planeload of us were stressed by the bag size check, even though most of us were fine. It felt like we had to prove to her that we were not cheaters and rule breakers and that she actually enjoyed catching people. I personally don't need that negativity in my life.
My step son and hubby have flown and they do stay its the most uncomfortable seats they have ever been on. For short distances i guess they are good, but they charge for every bag including carry on.I have never flown on them and wondered if they are any good. Do they cancel a lot or late?
THIS ^^^When everything goes well, they're fine as long as you pay attention to their rules. If things go wrong, there is usually no way to recover. Personally I won't use them for events that it would really hurt me to miss. But for a quick getaway or trip that you won't be heartbroken if it falls apart, I'd do it.
This sounds illegal. If the delay is caused by them they are supposed to compensate you - both meals and accommodations. Not so for weather delays. We got stuck in Portland because Southwest preemptively moved planes in advance of the hurricane that came ashore in So Cal. We were on the hook for that one, but at least they rescheduled our flight in plenty of time for us to make arrangements. Crazy but true, we still made it to So Cal before the hurricane made landfall.So I am done with Frontier. Yes any flight can have problems -- I'm a seasoned traveler -- but if the plane or the crew has anything wrong they have ZERO backup plan, the gate agents are slow and clueless, and they don't offer hotel vouchers even if it's their problem.
PHXscuba
Frontier pays the agent $10 per bag. She enjoyed it because she was earning money.she actually enjoyed catching people. I
You only save real money if you change the way you fly. Let the airline assign your seat. Buy the right size personal item. Wear your heavy clothing items. Check a maximum of 1 bag for 2 pax.Don't trust the price you see when you compare to other airlines - all the extra fees usually wipes that out.
Some markets Frontier doesn't even offer daily service. Your option will be to take whatever is offered or get a refund.If they are rescheduling people onto other flights, find the one that works best for
This is brilliant!If I book Frontier, I book a backup flight on Southwest.
Not illegal. There is no law or regulation requiring an airline to provide more than a refund of your ticket price. The major airlines all have policies in place and the DOT has combined those policies at https://www.transportation.gov/airconsumer/airline-cancellation-delay-dashboard It appears that one can receive meal vouchers if it's a controllable delay or cancellation, but I'm sure you'd have to know to ask for it and demand it in order to receive it.This sounds illegal. If the delay is caused by them they are supposed to compensate you - both meals and accommodations. Not so for weather delays. We got stuck in Portland because Southwest preemptively moved planes in advance of the hurricane that came ashore in So Cal. We were on the hook for that one, but at least they rescheduled our flight in plenty of time for us to make arrangements. Crazy but true, we still made it to So Cal before the hurricane made landfall.
Knowledge is everything and I don't pretend to be an expert. Know the rules before you talk to the gate agent. If they are rescheduling people onto other flights, find the one that works best for YOU before you talk to them. Cost does not matter - if the flight has seats and you are willing to do this legwork you'll get what you want at no added cost to you. The gate agent just wants to get you where you are going. This is especially true if the flight delay they caused will make you miss a connection somewhere else.