Skiplagging. How is it ever cheaper to go from point A-B-C than it would be to go A-B?

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I understand that skiplagging is finding a flight that is cheaper to go from point A, to B, with a planned trip to C, but just leaving the airport at B.

I don’t understand the basic concept of how this happens though. How is a flight from A-B-C, ever cheaper than a flight just A-B? The extra cost of the C leg would have to be entirely absorbed by the savings from A-B, how is that possible?

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14 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

The plane from B to C might not be full, so the airline wants to sell those tickets so they can get the value out of it by selling those tickets for extremely cheap. The plane from A to B is likely full, but the airline gave you a discount to encourage you to buy the flight from B to C.

This way you get a cheaper flight from A to B.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I saw an article about the airline banning this practice, and someone got refused boarding because they managed to get the customer to admit they planned to skiplag.

Why does it cost the airline anything? The ticket is paid for A-B-C, who cares if they get off at B?

Anonymous 0 Comments

Airline flights are not priced simply based on cost. There’s a complex balance of supply-and-demand that determines the price of a ticket.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Company 1 offers A-C direct. In order compete and not add a direct route, company 2 will sell you A-B-C at subsidized rate that’s competitive to company 1.