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Which airline responsible for lost luggage in connecting flight?

However, if you were on a connecting itinerary with more than one airline, the claim must be filed with the operating carrier of your last flight because that airline is ultimately responsible for delivering your bag to you, even if the bag never made it into its system.



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If they DO miss the connection, their luggage will be pulled off the carousel and stored for retrieval when they DO arrive, on the next available flight, with available seats.

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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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If you checked a bag, you'll have to collect it from baggage claim from the international flight. You'll need to clear customs and immigration. Next, you'll recheck your luggage for the domestic flight. Finally, you'll need to go through Transportation Security Administration screening.

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It depends on how your ticket was booked. If your flights were booked under one ticket, your bags will be checked through to your final destination. If your flights were booked under separate tickets, you will need to collect your bags and recheck them before your connecting flight.

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According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, you are entitled to compensation for reasonable incidental expenses you incur because of your delayed baggage, up to the maximum liability limits, set by statute. For U.S. domestic flights, this is $3,800 per passenger.

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How To Claim Delayed Baggage Compensation - A Guide
  1. Contact a Baggage Claim Desk. ...
  2. File your delayed baggage claim immediately. ...
  3. Request an overnight kit. ...
  4. Ask for an allowance for reasonable expenses. ...
  5. Check the status, wait and be patient. ...
  6. Claim your rights formally.


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According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, you are entitled to compensation for reasonable incidental expenses you incur because of your delayed baggage, up to the maximum liability limits, set by statute. For U.S. domestic flights, this is $3,800 per passenger.

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If you must check your suitcase, try to book a non-stop flight whenever possible — especially if you're flying international. According to SITA, the mishandling rate on international routes is 8.7 bags per thousand passengers; on domestic routes, it's 1.85 bags per thousand. Go carry-on only.

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Consider filing a lawsuit against the airline in small claims court. Small claims courts handle a wide variety of property-related lawsuits which include lawsuits for lost luggage by an airline. Small claims court is also an affordable and user-friendly way for you to sue an airline for lost or delayed luggage.

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Filing a Lost Luggage Report Probably Won't Help If this is a simple issue of delayed baggage, it should show up in the next three days. FAA data shows that delayed baggage usually arrives within 3-7 days. However, if the bag is truly lost, your chances of finding lost luggage after 30 days are cut in half.

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In most cases, you'll receive your boarding pass for your connecting flight already when you check in for your first flight. This means you don't have to check in again for your next flight. If you haven't received it, you can go to the transfer desk or kiosk of the airline you're flying with to collect it.

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Before concluding your bags are truly lost, try these three steps:
  1. Be patient. ...
  2. Look elsewhere. ...
  3. Stay calm. ...
  4. Locate the baggage desk for the airline that operated your final flight. ...
  5. Inform the agent about your missing bag. ...
  6. File a missing baggage report. ...
  7. Ask what the airline will cover. ...
  8. Make them come to you.


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However, the only time you have to get your checked bag and re-check it is when you have to go through customs and you have a connecting flight. You go through customs in the first country you land in.

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Customs and immigration are usually required at the connecting airport for international flights. You don't always have to for domestic flights. In most cases, passengers on layover flights must clear customs and immigration at the first point of entry.

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International connection baggage (“ICB''), is prepaid excess baggage for the guests who have an inbound/outbound connecting International flight while flying on the Airline's domestic network.

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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. ...
  • United Airlines and Delta Air Lines also prohibit skiplagging.


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