A typo on my airline ticket

Question: I recently bought tickets to Italy by calling Expedia. I spelled my wife’s first name to the agent. That afternoon we left town for a trip. When we returned the tickets were at the front door and a confirmation e-mail was waiting. My wife’s first name was spelled Crista instead of Christa.

I immediately called Expedia, and was told I should have contacted them the day the e-mail was sent to me and that there would be a $150 re-ticketing fee. After several more calls and being put on “hold” for more than half an hour, a supervisor told me that there was nothing they could do. They couldn’t even change the name on the ticket.

I contacted the airline directly and they told me they would make a note on my wife’s passenger record. My wife’s tickets are still wrong and I’m afraid we may have a problem with our connecting airline or with customs. What can I do? — Frank Santa Maria, New Braunfels, Texas

Answer: Expedia should have spelled your wife’s name correctly. When it was clear that the company had made an error, it should have done everything in its power to fix it instead of giving you the runaround and forcing you to deal directly with your airline.

Then again, it should have never come to this. First, why are you phoning an online travel agency to buy tickets? It may be more convenient, but online agencies are built to handle your purchases online. It’s more efficient and reduces the chance of an error being introduced — like misspelling a passenger’s name.

Second, you should always check your verification e-mail immediately. Expedia could have made a change to your ticket if you had caught the mistake earlier. It’s essential that you review your itinerary as soon as possible. Believe me, I know. I just made this mistake and had to spend an extra day at my destination because I put the wrong date in my reservation. (See? It can happen to anyone.)

I’ve dealt with too many wrong-name cases to count, and here are a few things I’ve learned. Passengers aren’t turned away at the gate because of a typographical error on their tickets. Reservations systems have limitations that sometimes truncate last names or render non-English names in funny characters. Last names and first names are frequently flip-flopped. Ticket agents, gate agents and security screeners know that, and will let you through.

I haven’t heard of anyone being denied boarding because of a one-character difference in a name. I’m reasonably sure your wife would have been allowed to travel using her ticket, even if this had happened after the May 15 implementation of the first phase of the Transportation Security Administration’s “Secure Flight” initiative, which requires that you provide your full name as it appears on your government-issued identification.

Incidentally, the “notation” in her reservation would have almost certainly been visible to any connecting airline. And a customs agent wouldn’t even pay attention to your ticket under normal circumstances. It’s your customs form and passport that matter to them.

Next time you buy tickets by phone — and I hope there’s no next time — do yourself a big favor: When you offer your name to the agent, ask to have it spelled back. That way, you’ll catch any errors before the transaction goes through. Once you have a reservation, it becomes much more difficult (or even impossible) to make a change.

It shouldn’t be that way. In an ideal world, you’d be able to change a name on a ticket. Airlines say they can’t allow name changes for “security reasons” but I’m inclined to believe it has more to do with the fact that they would lose lots of money if passengers could give their tickets to friends and family. Or resell them.

I contacted Expedia on your behalf, and it issued a new ticket with your wife’s name spelled correctly.

  • Joe Farrell

    If this happens in the future to any people reading this:

    First – you can dispute the charge – they did not provide you a ticket you can use – therefore – they failed to provide the service you paid for.

    Then – buy ticket #2 with the correct name.

    Before you do either of the above – ASK Expedia [or the airline or whomever] to pull the call from the call center – its recorded for a while. Then, listen to the call with them – prove they screwed up – and they’ll eat the fees and charges to fix it – they’ve got the relationships with the airline marketing department to put the fix in, just like you found out.

  • Carver

    Joe

    I don’t think that wil work. Admittedly I haven’t tried it, but I can easily see the credit card company siding with the airline. As the article states, you aren’t turned away necessary for a type.

  • H. Ronald Berg

    I was turned away by TSA at SFO because my ticket read HRonald Berg instread of exactly as my passport. I went back to Quantas and it took them more than 1&1/2 hours to fix it.

  • Bill

    Any airline or travel agency that takes more than a few minutes to fix a legitimate error like this should have their credentials revoked due to incompetence. It is absolutely unacceptable that this industry gives people the runaround over something like this.

    There is a BIG difference between correcting a typo and changing a name completely. Besides, if they are going to persist in hiring telephone representatives who do not speak the language well, misunderstandings are sure to happen.

    The amount of time and energy wasted over this issue is outrageous.

    Chris is right, don’t phone an online agency, but at the same time, one shouldn’t get hours or days of runaround for typos.

  • charles

    Bill is so absolutely right. This kind of reissuing difficulty is inexcusable. On the flip side though, it happens all the time (and I know, I work for a major airline). Still, it is what it is, and passengers have to protect themselves, so best to be sure the booking agent spells your name back for you. If there is an error (no matter what your feeling on the matter is), you’ll pay for it (time, hassles, and money!), so best to protect yourself. It’s the passenger who will pay the price for an error!

  • Sarah

    Well, people do get turned away sometimes. It depends on the agent. See this post at the Yarn Harlot. http://www.yarnharlot.ca/blog/archives/2009/05/15/in_which_i_try_not_to_complain.html And with the new travel rules going into effect, this will only get worse.

  • Roland

    The better way to avoid this problem is to go directly to the airline on the net. If a name is misspelled, you will hav ercourse. And you’ll save the booking fee.

  • jess

    i’ve been working with a well known online travel agency. i know that most travelers feel frustrated about these lind of issues but believe me, it’s harder for us travel agents. we are the middleman here..it’s not easy dealing with customers’ concern when the airline themselves wouldnt let us provide a wider set of options. so as much as we love to help out and reach out more, we are bounded by these rules! if we dont follow this rules, we are going to pay big time (as in THOUSAND of $!!!!). so i think what i’m trying to say is, let’s all be carefull and responsible to avoid issues like this. let’s work together as a consumer and as producers. Thanks!

  • Duke Nukem

    What about when the airline flubs your birthday? Will it be an issue with TSA?

  • Anonymous

    We have saved time and money for years to go to Prague on April 30, 2011. I bought the tickets through Hotwire. Somehow my partner’s last name, first letter was omitted. The ticket owner (SwissAir) couldn’t change it, only Hotwire, who explained that all sales were final. I could rebook on business class.

    I am afraid we will lose the trip. What can I do?

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/LNLRZWOVA4JIPGDW4PPJJBAE2E yahoo-LNLRZWOVA4JIPGDW4PPJJBAE2E

    Hi Alison, I’m incurring the same problem. Were you still able to fly?

  • Alison

    The  travel columnist for USA Today intervened. I was allowed to rebook on HotWire.  I made a donation to a charity in her honour.

    We could only afford to pay the same price, andthe only tickets available the night before were through Warsaw (!).

    LOT had rented awful planes from Air Italy for the long haul. Disgusting: broken tray tables and seats. Very few washrooms. Filthy.

    But we got there.