You may enter your name into the standby list if: Your original flight was canceled.You were bumped from your original flight due to overbooking.You want to take an earlier or later flight to your destination.
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Non-employees can get on the standby list by speaking to a ticket agent or gate agent. This usually must occur in person at the airport, and not over the phone. When the flight boards, agents give any available seats to standby passengers, who wait at the gate to be called.
Standbys these days are reserved for people who have been bumped off the flight they were initially booked on, those who would like to get on an earlier flight on the same day they were meant to travel, or who wish to fly to a different airport at their destination.
SAME-DAY STANDBYYou may wait for a seat on an earlier flight than your original ticket, if the Same-Day Confirmed option is not available. Same-Day Standby is a complimentary service at no cost to you. Until you have been assigned a seat on an earlier flight, your original flight will remain confirmed.
A buddy pass is a form of standby ticket by using your family's or friend's ticket benefits. It is not a confirmed ticket and means a person with buddy pass gets on a flight if there are empty or available seats. With this kind of arrangement, a buddy pass is typically much cheaper and flexible than confirmed tickets.
You're more likely to get standby flights on less popular routes, off-peak travel seasons, or if you're a member of an airline's loyalty program. To improve your chances, arrive at the airport early and avoid checked luggage. Wait until the last minute in case your name is called.
Standby passengers who don't get seats are rolled into the standby list for the next flight. Standby passengers typically have priority based on how much they paid for their tickets and their relative status in the airline's frequent flyer program.