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lordfrito | 9 months ago

Apparently the article author hasn't heard about the concept of a "group discount"

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josephcsible|9 months ago

The point is that the extent of the group discount is absurd. E.g., the ORD-LEX one, $214 for a single ticket, and then only $1 more for a second one.

Aurornis|9 months ago

I’ve been pricing tickets for a family trip recently and I have not seen anything that extreme.

That’s definitely a cherry picked example for the article, not the common scenario.

kubectl_h|9 months ago

If you read the article than you'd understand it's about degree of discount to which two or more passengers are receiving. In some cases two tickets is almost as cheap as one ticket. If these prices converge it would actually make sense to buy two tickets for one traveler if you value comfort and can afford it.

dbuxton|9 months ago

Although in this case you actually have to be accompanied by another adult

paulgb|9 months ago

Part of what makes it seem shady here is that airline ticket prices are pretty opaque. If they advertised it as a group discount, it would be received differently.

kenjackson|9 months ago

Airline pricing in general is pretty opaque. Not hospital pricing opaque, but still pretty opaque. It's one of the few things we regularly purchase where the price changes almost daily (both up and down). For example, bus and train tickets are pretty much the same price each day for the same route. For airlines, I'll often check the price on some future night to see if it is cheaper or not.

ttoinou|9 months ago

Maybe even if it was a possibility before, it wasn't used and now airlines have enough data and market power to actually make different prices for groups

(By the way, if it's about inflating prices for individual, then it's not really volume discounting... it just appears this way on the outside)