

No matter who you call, it’s likely that you’ll end up with delays, be stuck on the phone for quite some time, and potentially see calls dropping. If your airline has this, use it, but many still need (or want to dissuade you from calling by requiring) you to ring them on the actual phone. Some airlines are good about using new ways of communicating, like Facebook Messenger, Twitter, WhatsApp, WeChat, and so on. Use other ways to communicate if possible ©Thomas Jackson/Getty Images Try to avoid calling wherever possible Read more: Airfares drop amid the Coronavirus crisis – why now is not the right time to book a flight They’re also starting to lean on governments to allow them to give vouchers instead of refunds, so if you’re owed a refund I’d get your claim in ASAP. Airlines are, however, making it very hard to obtain anything but a voucher, which is in essence passengers giving a company in poor financial health an involuntary interest-free loan. The airline is obligated to give you a refund. The regulations - whether in the United States, United Kingdom, European Union - state clearly that you’re owed your money back if the airline cancels your flight. The key thing is to understand which of two situations you fall into: first, if the airline itself has cancelled your flight, or second, if your flight is still (somewhat miraculously) supposed to operate. Read more: Will my airline give me a refund due to the coronavirus? Have you tried to get a refund from an airline for coronavirus travel reasons recently, only to find that their website will only give you a voucher good for future travel? You’re not alone - even in those cases when laws state that airlines must offer a refund.

Transport Companies - Thread about transport while you're in IrelandĬar Rental Tips Provided by RebelCityTours.How to get a refund, not a voucher ©sankai/Getty Images Transport for Ireland - For finding Public Transport connections r/IrishAirports - For information about the airports of Irelandĭiscover Ireland Website - Great place to look for things to do while hereĭiscover Northern Ireland Website- Specifically for Northern IrelandĬitizen's Information - Visa's, healthcare or general Irish bureaucratic life r/IWantOut - For information on moving from anywhere to anywhere r/StudyInIreland - For Prospective Students r/MoveToIreland - For all your moving to Ireland questions We try to relieve the lovely people of /r/Ireland / /r/NorthernIreland and more from answering the same questions ad nauseam - you're lovely too, but you'll wear us out Useful Links:
AER LINGUS CLAIM REFUND FREE
Use the Search Function, the Stickied Map, or feel free to scroll through the sub for travel tips, recommendations or inspiration before you post your questions This sub was previously a searchable archive, anything posted before June 2019 will be a link to another sub and the comments will be there and not on this sub. But also you will find links to info relevant to a visitor from threads already posted on /r/ireland, /r/northernireland, other relevant subs or news and tourist sites. Please feel free to post questions about visiting Ireland here. Welcome to IrishTourism, bear with us as we transition from one form of sub to an open use sub.
