WindowSeat From United States of America, joined Sep 2003, 1307 posts, RR: 59 Posted (5 years 2 months 2 weeks 4 days 5 hours ago) and read 5189 times:
Hello,
Lately, I have seen seatts allocated in the S class on Delta. I wonder what fare class this is and what it is used for. I hadn't seen it before.
Thanks,
WindowSeat
I'm all in favour of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Let's start with keyboards.
LipeGIG From Brazil, joined May 2005, 11200 posts, RR: 61 Reply 1, posted (5 years 2 months 2 weeks 4 days 5 hours ago) and read 5169 times:
AIRLINERS.NET CREW FORUM MODERATOR
S Fare Class:
Non-upgradeable, transoceanic or domestic - consolidator fares. Generally changeable without fee through your booking agent (e.g. tour group). These are NOT priceline fares ... they are fares purchased by a consolidator valid on any number of flights, generally international, for coach travel.
Flynavy From , joined Dec 1969, posts, RR: Reply 2, posted (5 years 2 months 2 weeks 4 days 4 hours ago) and read 5163 times:
I'm pretty sure "S" fares are fares negotiated with other carriers. In the Business class cabin, an "S" fare usually refers to seats negotiated with a marketing agreement with AS. In the coach cabin, "S" fares usually refer to seats negotiated with KLM, Asiana, Philippine Airlines, Thai, and El Al.
WindowSeat From United States of America, joined Sep 2003, 1307 posts, RR: 59 Reply 3, posted (5 years 2 months 2 weeks 4 days 4 hours ago) and read 5147 times:
Quoting Flynavy (Reply 2): "S" fares usually refer to seats negotiated with KLM, Asiana, Philippine Airlines, Thai, and El Al.
Do you mean codeshares? If not, how do I book these fares? In fact, how do I find out what the fare is in the first place?
Is it cheaper than 'T'?
cheers,
WindowSeat
I'm all in favour of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Let's start with keyboards.