by happytraveller » Wed Jun 27, 2007 5:21 pm
I had booked an award ticket with Singapore Airlines for a return trip from Hong Kong to Seoul, Korea. When I telephoned SIA to pay the departure taxes (which I have to pay on a 'free' ticket) I was quoted a figure of $239. Another later telephone call got the same quote, which I refused to pay. Lots of telephone calls to SIA and finally, just before departure, a trip to their office in Christhchurch NZ. There, the taxes were reduced to about $145, but this was still above the correct figure. Got to Hong Kong to find that there was no trace of my electronic ticket, so more delays and problems there, before a new paper ticket was issued. More problems with the return reservation from Seoul as well. Emails ignored by SIA also.
I did some research and found that the correct tax figure was around $70. SIA had said that I also had to pay Hong Kong departure tax, even though I was in transit only at HKG. Lots of emails to SIA, who insisted that they were right. I continued to check via the internet, and sent them all the evidence that they were overcharging.
It seems that there is a deliberate policy with SIA to overcharge for taxes on these award tickets. Comparison with other airlines showed just how much they were trying to overcharge. I guess that a lot of travellers are paying the inflated 'tax' figures believing that they are the correct amounts.
Singapore Airlines customer service has proved hopeless. Emails were sometimes ignored, telephone calls not returned, and a lot of incorrect information and excuses were given. The experience of their customer service has been extremely poor. This policy of overcharging (and also charging 'taxes' that a traveller does not legally have to pay) is fraudulent. Paying the correct amount for departure taxes etc. is fair enough, what is not fair is for SIA to charge 2 or 3 times the correct figure, and then try to convince travellers that this is indeed the correct amount. Almost amounts to fraud.
Had their customer service had been more apologetic, then I could have forgiven them, but their insistance that they were right, ignoring of emails and telephone calls and their replies (when they did actually reply) point to very poor customer 'service'. The advice that I would give to others is to check via the internet BEFORE you pay the departure 'taxes' that an airline is asking for. What the airline is demanding, and what is legally required, may be two very different figures, as was the case in this instance.