The United-Delta Fare War Continues: $118 roundtrip, DC-Los Angeles on Delta

It’s another fare basis starting in UA, UA0INNQ. There’s no minimum stay, maximum stay, Saturday night stay, or even advance purchase required. The fare is valid to or from Washington’s Dulles or National airport.Delta doesn’t fly non-stop. I’ve seen connections in Delta’s Atlanta hub and Dallas. The fare even seems to work with Delta codeshare flights on Continental aircraft through Houston and Cleveland.

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Frequent Travelers Have to Eat, Too

Spot On links to a personal chef service that will come to your home, prepare all of your meals, and store them to be reheated in minutes. This is capitalism at its greatest, offering specialized services that give people more of the most precious commodity, time. Rather than a “fast food nation” perhaps we’re evolving to be able enjoy time with family without sacrificing health or quality. Fine Dining Solutions in the Washington DC area offers some great meals, but no miles. If I were a chef I’d offer miles. But that’s why all of our contributions are unique.

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Australia deals on United

United has some very impressive E-Fares to Australia for travel beginning May 31 through June 3, 2004 and returning June 7 through June 10, 2004. From: To: Roundtrip: Chicago (ORD) Sydney, Australia (SYD) $599 Denver (DEN) Melbourne, Australia (MEL) $589 Los Angeles (LAX) Sydney, Australia (SYD) $599 San Francisco (SFO) Melbourne, Australia (MEL) $549 Washington, D.C. (IAD) Sydney, Australia (SYD) $639 Other departure cities are available as well. A roundtrip from Washington, DC to Australia is about 20,000 flown miles. Premier Executives and Premier Executive 1Ks get a 100% mileage bonus. That’s 40,000 miles at 1.6 cents per mile, a long way towards requalifying for elite status, plus credits in the round the world promotion.

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Virgin USA to be based at San Francisco or New York

Arnold Schwarzenegger’s lobbying hasn’t nailed it down for California completely — Branson is considering both San Francisco and New York. British entrepreneur Richard Branson said on Monday the Virgin USA start-up airline, which is tentatively set to launch sometime next year, has narrowed its choices for a home city to San Francisco or New York. … “I can’t at this stage confirm whether it’s going to be Airbus or Boeing … I think the airline is going to need about 50 planes,” he said

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More on Amtrak Discounts

I keep an updated list of Amtrak discount codes on this blog. Frommer’s publishes such a list as well. Here’s what they have to say about the matter: The best of the bunch is code V822. It will knock fares down by 20% on all unreserved trains as far north as Albany, as far east as Boston, as far west as Harrisburg and as far south as Virginia. There are no blackout dates, and you can travel as late as Dec. 16 on this code. When you’re picking your train on Amtrak’s site, look for trains with a “U” symbol under the “Accommodations” column — those are the unreserved trains. If V822 doesn’t work, try V729, a very similar discount. Want to try the high-speed Acela train? Use code V711 for Acela and Metroliner trains…

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Coded messages

I blogged recently about airlines communicating with each other about pricing through the media, since anti-trust rules preclude them from discussing their pricing directly. Airlines also communicate with each other through arcane ‘fare basis codes’. Every airfare carries with it a several letter code which is used to identify the rules and restrictions associated with the ticket. On Friday Delta loaded a fare of ~ $98 between Chicago and New York … no advance purchase or Saturday stay required. The fare basis was UA0TN. Get it… UA, for United Airlines, which is headquartered in Chicago?So sometime on Saturday United loaded a fare of ~ $98 between New York and both Cincinnati and Atlanta, Delta’s two East Coast hubs. Delta sent United a message, and United sent one back. United’s fare basis is TNMX. The first…

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IcelandAir Mistake Fare Honored

The $61 IcelandAir mistake fare was covered in the Wall Street Journal on Thursday (thanks to an alert reader for the heads up) and in Friday’s Rocky Mountain News. Cheap Tickets helps people fly on the cheap, but customers may never again see a deal like the one offered this week. A computer glitch on the company’s Web site allowed numerous fliers to book round-trip tickets from the United States to Reykjav’k, Iceland, on Icelandair for under $100 – far less than the normal summer fares. … On Thursday evening, Cendant Corp., owner of Cheap Tickets, said it was honoring the fares. It did not say how many of the dirt-cheap tickets had been purchased, and Iceland-air did not return a phone call. Speculation is that at least 800 tickets were purchased at the $61…

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