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Tuesday, November 19, 2024
HomeCruiseCan Windstar Cruises keep my $17,000 airfare after I canceled?

Can Windstar Cruises keep my $17,000 airfare after I canceled?

Windstar claims it booked the tickets through a third party called Global Marine Travel and that they are nonrefundable. I called American Airlines, which confirmed that it sent a refund to Global Marine Travel. It looks like Windstar Cruises is keeping our $17,000 airfare. Can you help us get a refund?
Q. My husband and I booked business-class airfare for our Windstar cruise in New Zealand through the cruise line. There was no mention of the tickets being nonrefundable until we received the confirmation. We had to cancel the cruise, and we tried to get a ticket refund.
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A. Windstar should have disclosed that your airline tickets were nonrefundable. And if the airline refunded your tickets, it should have at least considered passing that refund along to you.
I reviewed the correspondence between you and Windstar. I could not find any disclosure of the non-refundability in its e-mails to you. Since business-class tickets are often refundable, you had every reason to believe you might get a refund — or, at least, a full ticket credit.
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In an e-mail sent to you, Windstar pointed out that according to its terms, air travel is nonrefundable once purchased, no matter what your ticket says. So that means even if American refunds Windstar’s travel agency, it gets to keep the money.
I’ve dealt with these double-jeopardy refund cases before, and I have a problem with any company imposing new rules on a purchase. But that’s not why I took your case. I took it because I could not find any disclosure of Windstar’s refund rules on their website (www.windstarcruises.com/terms-conditions).
You tried to resolve this yourself by filing a dispute on your credit card (more information on how to do so at www.elliott.org/ultimate-consumer-guides-smart-travelers/the-complete-guide-to-chargebacks-and-winning-a-credit-card-dispute). A chargeback is your last line of defense against a fraudulent purchase. You might have contacted one of the executives at Windstar Cruises (found at www.elliott.org/company-contacts/windstar-cruises) to plead your case before trying a credit card dispute.
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Mostly, I was curious about Windstar’s disclosure. The paper trail between you and the cruise line did not spell out the airfare refund rules. I contacted Windstar to see if I had missed something. In response, the cruise line refunded your $17,000 airline tickets.
Christopher Elliott is the founder of Elliott Advocacy (elliottadvocacy.org), a nonprofit organization that helps consumers solve their problems. E-mail him at chris@elliott.org or get help by contacting him at elliottadvocacy.org/help.

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