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Why Airlines Make Small Changes In Flight Times

several airplanes at an airport

You always read about what to do if an airline makes a big change to what time your flight takes off. Delta moved your flight from 10am to 8pm? Make your own changes! American can’t fly you until tomorrow? Get monetary compensation! The list goes on and on.

Honestly, the big changes can happen for lots of big reasons. Two weeks before your flight on United, you find out that your 2:16pm flight to LAX is now not until 8:47pm and you’re going to miss your connecting flight on Southwest. Or you’ve purposely chosen this particular flight on Frontier so your family doesn’t get home too late on Sunday because the kids have to go to school the next day, but they’ve now changed your flight to Tuesday. What they don’t tell you is that they’ve actually switched to a smaller plane and your seat doesn’t exist anymore so they’re putting you on the next flight, which isn’t until 6-1/2 hour later. Or tomorrow.

But what if the time shift they’ve given you is tiny? Say, your departure time was originally 9:38am and now you’re scheduled for 9:41am. Or you were supposed to land at 3:12pm and now it will be at 3:10pm, even though your departure time hasn’t changed. You can’t “get” anything for those types of changes. But why do they happen?

There are several reasons. Most originally stem from the fact that airlines release these schedules nearly a year in advance and, well, things happen.

So yeah, there are several reasons why a flight will have a change in time that’s just a couple of minutes. They don’t really affect your flight, and you certainly can’t ask for compensation. But there ya go.

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