Here’s a Business Class Seat upgrade strategy that works more often than not.
If your elite upgrade hasn’t been confirmed in the permitted timeframe (usually 24 to 72 hours prior to departure, depending on the program) for your return flight, get creative by calling the airline to see if there are flights on your date of departure with Business Class seat upgrades that you can confirm.
Sure, it can cost $25 to $100 in change fees to confirm a Business Class seat upgrade, but that’s an inexpensive way of avoiding upgrade roulette at the gate.
American Airlines has made a Business Class seat upgrade even easier to do by reducing the fee, from $100 to $25, for confirmed changes to the return portion of an itinerary when departure time is within three hours of the original flight.
This strategy works best, of course, with routes that have frequent flights, say New York-Chicago or Dallas-Los Angeles.
The key to this upgrade strategy is to start early. Check the availability of Business Class seats on other flights immediately when yours don’t get confirmed within your elite level’s timeframe.
If a flight is really tight, a Business Class seat might not be available in the same “fare bucket” as the one you purchased. That means paying a fare difference that is sometimes a lot, sometimes not, in addition to the change fee.
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