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Spirit to start charging for bags and drinks..

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Frequency

Well-known member
Joined
May 23, 2002
Posts
111
Look like they are heading the way of Skybus...

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Airline To Start Charging For Bags, Soft Drinks

March 8, 2007 04:36 PM CST

Spirit Airlines said it will take the unusual step of charging for all checked baggage and for drinks such as coffee and soda on flights starting in June, while also cutting fares by up to 40 percent.

The Miramar-based low-cost carrier that flies domestically and to Latin America and the Caribbean said Tuesday it is cutting fares from 10 to 40 percent system wide, and on last-minute fares as well.

Spirit - which has a hub in Detroit - also will charge for each checked bag for flights taking place June 20 or after, according to its Web site.

Customers will still be allowed one carry-on bag for free, but one or two checked bags will cost $5 each if passengers make flight reservations on the carrier's Web site. The fee will be $10 each for one or two bags if passengers don't use the Web site for reservations. The charge is $100 for the third bag and on.

The airline currently allows one checked bag for free and $10 for a second checked bag.

Also starting June 20, soft drinks, juices, coffee and tea - which are now free - will cost $1. Water will still be free.

Most large U.S. carriers allow a carry-on bag and up to two or three checked bags at no additional charge per passenger. However, U.K.-based Ryanair charges a fee for each item of checked baggage, according to its Web site. Air Canada offers customers the option of saving $5 if they don't check any baggage.

With drinks, carriers usually charge for alcoholic beverages on domestic flights. But sodas, coffee and juice are usually free.

Bob Harrell, a travel consultant in New York, said airlines that cater to leisure travel such as Spirit often adjust fares, raising or lowering them 25 percent or more from one week to another in some cases. But airlines also are seeking ways to offset baggage handling costs, and lowering prices may be a way for Spirit to justify the move to charge for checked bags, Harrell said

"The baggage and the soda changes are new," said Harrell, of Harrell Associates. "If they're not exclusively new, then it's certainly unusual."

However, Harrell added that while it's possible that the major airlines would be looking at the success or failure of Spirit's changes, "You wouldn't see a lemming type of match from the larger carriers."

The move also reflects a strategy where services for baggage handling and beverages are "a la carte," or pay-as-you-go, said Robert Mann, an airline industry analyst with R.W. Mann & Co. Inc. in Port Washington, N.Y.

At Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, Naomi Berger waited for a return flight to New York's Laguardia Airport. She said the airline told her of the $10 charge for a second checked bag by e-mail, and that she was OK with the extra charge because she paid $85 for her round trip ticket from New York to visit a relative in Miami Beach with her daughter and husband.

"If they keep the fares down, people use them," said Berger, who lives on Long Island.

But her husband, Robert Berger, was more critical of the charges. He said airlines are more interested in just getting travelers to their destinations and making short-term profits, rather than building a customer base by providing good service.

"Only an airline with no pride would charge you for a cup of soda," said Robert Berger, who is in the telecommunications business. "We'll pay them for the $10 for baggage and $1 for soda because we're still ahead of the game" on ticket prices, he said.

Spirit also plans to eliminate first-class service and free alcoholic drinks. The former first-class seats will be called "Big Front Seats" and sell at premium prices.

The airline is offering 1 cent fares, plus fees and taxes, to and from select cities in March, April and May. Customers have until Wednesday to book those flights.

Spirit, which is privately owned, offers service to 33 cities in the United States, Latin America and the Caribbean. Spirit has hubs in Detroit and Fort Lauderdale. Its competitors include JetBlue, Northwest Airlines and Southwest Airlines.
© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 
Ryanair (Europe) already does all this and more - look for charges for absolutely anything you use, wheelchairs included. Also advertising on overhead bins and seats that don't recline! The public may get just what they want - zero frills, low airfares, no apologies.
 
I was reading on Flight International that Ryan Air told Boeing that they no longer want window shades (weigh too much) or pockets in the seat backs of their chairs (collect trash).

It's coming..................
 
Ryanair also charges their crews for water or sodas. Niiiiice.


Bye Bye--General Lee
 
Taking a dump will be free but expect to pay $1 a square.

Man, I thought that Ryan Air already put the quarter slots (I guess euro slots) outside of the can. And that someone would also be in the can handing out mints and cologne and other variuous toiletries....ahhhh, that also would require at least a few Euros there too. Over all, to snap one off on Ryan Air is gonna cost yah about 5 bucks as a bare bones minimum. You get cologne/perfume/mints/candy from the can man and your way over that figure.
 
We joke about it but this is the eventual reality that we all face. Spirit mgt has decided that they can not compete with the likes of SWA and B6. So in a price driven market how does one effectively grab market share? Be the cheapest.

Airlines like SWA and B6 don't need to do this to compete but if this works expect Airtran and Frontier to follow rather quickly and expect them to try and out do Spirit.
 
Expect Airtran and Frontier to follow quickly?? Good way to stir the pot, either that or your a moron...
 

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