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What is hacker fare on kayak?

Hacker Fares are like ordering 2 appetizers instead of an entree: a way to save money and still get what you want. By combining 2 one-way fares, you can book a round-trip flight for less. Tip: check pricing and availability for each flight before confirming your reservation.



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What are hacker fares? Throwaway tickets. Airlines sometimes price one-way tickets higher because they are used by business travelers, who have more money to spend. You can buy a round-trip ticket for less and then just throw away the return.

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Booking a hacker fare isn't illegal, Cathy Mansfield, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University, told CBS News.

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What's a Hacker Fare? Instead of making you book one round-trip ticket from a single airline, KAYAK plays airfare matchmaker by finding two one-way tickets that together make a round-trip flight. Sometimes that means you might take a different airline home than the one you took to your destination.

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The practice goes by a few different names, including skiplagging or hidden-city flying. Passengers disembark at their layover city, leaving an empty seat on their next flight, and save money in the process. But airlines are cracking down on the practice, claiming it breaches their rules and costs them revenue.

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Is Kayak reliable? Kayak is just as reliable as other travel search engines, so there's no need to wonder, can I trust Kayak? In reality, it can often be more reliable than third-party booking sites since its users are driven to individual travel providers for booking.

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Is skiplagging illegal? No, but it's against most airlines' contracts of carriage or the rules people must follow to fly with the airline. American Airlines and Southwest Airlines both put skiplagging first on their lists of prohibited booking practices.

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While skiplagging isn't illegal, American Airlines filed a civil lawsuit earlier this month against Skiplagged.com, accusing the company of unauthorized and deceptive ticketing practices and tricking customers into believing they've gained access to a secret loophole.

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Kayak (styled as KAYAK) is a metasearch engine owned and operated by Booking Holdings.

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Our goal is to make the fares you see as transparent as possible. This means we don't take any kind of fee or influence your search results in any way.

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Kayak receives distribution revenue from the travel suppliers or travel agencies that website users click on to complete travel transactions. Sites like Kayak are considered part of the distribution channel for travel services providers. Essentially, these sites pay Kayak when Kayak sends customers to them.

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The answer is Yes! Skyscanner is an independent company with the sole goal of helping you find the best option for your personal travel plans. Every month, over 100 million customers trust Skyscanner to help them find the best deals on flights, hotels, and car rentals.

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Flight searches are usually driven by dates, but Skyscanner lets you search by price. In the search panel, just select “Cheapest Month” instead of actual dates. We'll show you the cheapest flights available right now, with prices broken down by day so you can snag the lowest-priced ticket.

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