flere-imsaho
09-16-2005, 06:20 PM
Recently, I noticed that British Midlands had dropped their fares from Chicago to London to $150 roundtrip from now until March.
"Cool!", I thought, since that would mean I could visit friends in England for relatively cheap.
I went to the website and selected my flights, but once done selecting them (but the step before purchasing them), it said I'd be paying almost $400 per ticket.
"Odd", I thought. I looked at the fine print. The fine print said upwards of $200 was added to the bill for "taxes and fees". I looked at the taxes and fees and found (I'm paraphrasing here): "A tax of $200 may be added to the purchase of tickets by the U.S. government based on certain fares or routing."
I checked other airlines, other flights, other destinations. All the same. If you want to fly international from the U.S., apparently you're going to pay a $200 tax.
So, questions: Is this new? Has anyone else run into this? Is there any way around it?
"Cool!", I thought, since that would mean I could visit friends in England for relatively cheap.
I went to the website and selected my flights, but once done selecting them (but the step before purchasing them), it said I'd be paying almost $400 per ticket.
"Odd", I thought. I looked at the fine print. The fine print said upwards of $200 was added to the bill for "taxes and fees". I looked at the taxes and fees and found (I'm paraphrasing here): "A tax of $200 may be added to the purchase of tickets by the U.S. government based on certain fares or routing."
I checked other airlines, other flights, other destinations. All the same. If you want to fly international from the U.S., apparently you're going to pay a $200 tax.
So, questions: Is this new? Has anyone else run into this? Is there any way around it?