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The Airlines That Allow You to Transfer Your Airline Ticket to Someone Else

a hand holding a ticket

Say you’ve bought your airline ticket, you’re past the 24-hour cancellation mark, and something happens. You can’t go. Unless you’ve bought a refundable ticket or have some form of travel insurance that can help you in whatever your situation is for not being able to go, with a handful of exceptions, you may be out of luck in terms of getting a refund.

Can you sell/give/transfer your ticket to someone else? In the U.S., usually no, but there are a couple of exceptions. And even more when you’re talking about international travel.

U.S. Carriers

The big three, American, Delta, and United, don’t allow you to transfer tickets to someone else’s name. Big surprise there, right?

As per an article in USA Today from several years back, airlines don’t change names on airline tickets for 2 reasons, as per a representative from American:

  1. Airline Policy – An airline needs to know who the customer is so it can “provide quality service.” Also, “Since air transportation is a service that perishes when the aircraft door is closed, it is in both the passengers’ and airline’s interest to closely match the number of passengers to seats available, from both customer service and revenue management perspective.”
  2. Security – An airline wants to ensure that the person with the ticket is the same person going through the TSA checkpoint and getting screened.

Anybody else call bullspit on these?

  1. “Policy” is something that can ALWAYS be changed – but airlines only do it to suit and make more profits for them, not to make things easier or more convenient for us. Not being able to transfer tickets means that you either have to pay a cancellation fee or eat the ticket. Either way, the person you want to transfer the ticket to will still have to buy their own ticket. Yeah, “revenue management” is definitely the operative word. Well, words.
  2. The TSA has a whole lot of problems, but since you often don’t even have to show your boarding pass to TSA officers anymore, I’m pretty sure they have a system set up to ensure that the name on the ticket matches the name on the I.D. 😉

It’s strongly suspected that US airlines want to:

Anyway, a couple of US-based airlines have some form of transferring tickets to another person:

Outside The U.S.

If you’re traveling internationally, there are more airlines that allow you to transfer your ticket. Here are some of them:

These are 9 airlines that allow name changes, but there are others. A quick search for the name of your intended airline, along with the search terms TRANSFER NAME TICKET, should help.

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