Hope no one minds that my 1st post here is a moan, and sorry if this has already been covered, if it has i didnt find it......
On September 6th 2005 the oil price hit a massive $70 a barrel and Virgin increased their fuel surcharge to 30 per sector.
Today, crude is priced at $40 per barrel but the fuel surchage is more than double what it was in 2005 at between 68 and 96 per economy sector, depending on distance travelled.
Prices seem to have stabalised, and even if they doubled overnight, we would only be back to the same level in 2005 when the fuel surcharge was 30.
At what crude price is their NO fuel surcharge? A surcharge is designed to cover extra costs. Fuel is never an extra, the airline always expected to pay it.
I see a scenario now where crude could dip to say $25 and there are still fuel surcharges.
Fuel surcharges confuse many and now serve no purpose. They also penalise loyal customers as when a reward flight is booked, surcharges and taxes are added.
Here is an example. Virgin advertise you can pay for your flight with miles to LA for 50,000 miles, however when taxes and surcharges are added, the cost is still 270 and you have had to make 5 return trips (n class) to get what is in effect only a 15% reduction on the sale prices (hardly free or a reward!), let alone you are spending your miles (which some will have saved for years) instead of earning, and not getting tier points.
Had this on my mind for a while - thanks for reading.
Col
On September 6th 2005 the oil price hit a massive $70 a barrel and Virgin increased their fuel surcharge to 30 per sector.
Today, crude is priced at $40 per barrel but the fuel surchage is more than double what it was in 2005 at between 68 and 96 per economy sector, depending on distance travelled.
Prices seem to have stabalised, and even if they doubled overnight, we would only be back to the same level in 2005 when the fuel surcharge was 30.
At what crude price is their NO fuel surcharge? A surcharge is designed to cover extra costs. Fuel is never an extra, the airline always expected to pay it.
I see a scenario now where crude could dip to say $25 and there are still fuel surcharges.
Fuel surcharges confuse many and now serve no purpose. They also penalise loyal customers as when a reward flight is booked, surcharges and taxes are added.
Here is an example. Virgin advertise you can pay for your flight with miles to LA for 50,000 miles, however when taxes and surcharges are added, the cost is still 270 and you have had to make 5 return trips (n class) to get what is in effect only a 15% reduction on the sale prices (hardly free or a reward!), let alone you are spending your miles (which some will have saved for years) instead of earning, and not getting tier points.
Had this on my mind for a while - thanks for reading.
Col