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Coupon
Secrets
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Charlie · November
27, 2000
After last week's
column on the US Airways coupons, e-mail that I received indicated
that I should revisit an earlier column on airline coupons. Here is an
updated column that ran more than a year ago. If you can find these coupons,
buy them. They are worth more than their weight in gold.
I don't know whether you clip coupons from the Sunday newspaper and save
them from packets sent in the mail, but I certainly do. I love saving
money.
My girlfriend, who would go out of her way to pay full price, admits that
her tolerance for my bargain-hunting is based on the joy I get when I
find a great deal. I play a game to try to pay for my newspapers that
week through grocery coupons I find.
Imagine my joy when I discovered my first airline coupon. I didn't quite
believe it, but upon carefully checking out the coupon, I realized that
there really are coupons worth hundreds of dollars.
Airline coupons come in all shapes and sizes. Virtually every airline
engages in some form of couponing. Airline coupons come from shopping
malls with a minimum purchase of merchandise, they come in the mail together
with takeout Chinese restaurant menus, they show up in credit card bills,
they appear in clothing catalogs, city tourism offices send them out with
packets of brochures, and you'll often find them with frequent flyer materials.
Sometimes, when the airline discount coupon comes with a purchase of a
low-cost item, it is worth more than the item itself. The discounts are
normally excellent, providing transportation for far less than advance
purchase tickets.
Coupons are like found money. And if you know how to squeeze the most
from them the bargains can get even better.
Here's the best part. This is the secret few airlines seem to promote:
Most airlines will honor the coupons of competitors. So, if you have a
coupon on airline A but prefer to fly on airline B, you can almost always
use one airline's coupon on a competing airline. You just have to ask.
Call your preferred airline and ask them if they will honor another airline's
coupon. The agent will ask which airline and then will asked for the "Reference
Number," tucked in the corner of the coupon. Once the agent has the information,
it will take a minute or two, but you'll soon have an answer.
Not all coupons are transferable from airline to airline, but the majority
of them are. Frequent flier coupons are an important exception to this
rule.
Another great benefit is that unlike frequent flyer coupons, which have
plenty of restrictions, these basic coupons can be shared with friends
and family.
In my last column I noted that US Airways was now offering coupons for
anyone spending $100 on groceries at Stop & Shop in the Northeast. I now
have four coupons and will be buying more. The coupons were totally transferable
to friends. Better yet, these airline coupons will be honored on other
airlines. Like I say above, "Just ask."
The most important information on a coupon is the fine print. Here, you
will find the restrictions and rules for obtaining your discount. These
are important - no matter with which airline you attempt to use the coupon,
these fine-print restrictions will stay in effect. You may have a "coupon
for a coupon" and have to mail in a request for the actual coupon. Some
coupons require a handling fee, others have blackout dates, some require
that you use a specific credit card and several will require travel with
another person or from specific airports.
When dealing with airline coupons, the stakes are far more than just a
dollar off on a bottle of dishwasher detergent - airline coupons are serious
marketing tools that can save you hundreds of dollars.
Charlie
Leocha is the Boston-based author of Travel
Rights: Know the Rules of the Road and the Air Before You Go. Cheap
Charlie appears every Monday on this site. E-mail him at leocha@aol.com
or access his Web site.
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