Q: I’m having a problem with a flight refund and need your help. I booked a round-trip flight on Aerolineas Argentinas from Miami to Buenos Aires. The flight was supposed to depart at 5:15 p.m. I received an email from the airline two months before my departure, advising me that the flight was now going to depart at 8:05 a.m. the same day. This was not going to work for me because I was flying from Atlanta to Miami earlier that day.
I tried calling Aerolineas Argentinas’ toll-free number six times. Each time, there was no answer; the call just dropped. I went on the airline website and completed the cancellation request. I received an automated acknowledgment and a case number, but I have not heard from the airline since then.
I sent two successive emails to the airline. I have also tried communicating with it on WhatsApp, but it has not responded. I would like Aerolineas Argentinas to cancel the reservation and issue a full refund. Can you help me get my $571 back?
A: Aerolineas Argentinas should have sent you a refund within a week. That’s not just my opinion; it’s a government requirement. If you pay by credit card, the Department of Transportation gives the airline seven days; if it’s by cash or check, the airline has 20 days.
Why didn’t it give you a refund? Well, no airline wants to refund a ticket, so Aerolineas Argentinas is hardly alone. I’ve seen them hem and haw and try to push passengers to take a different flight. But this was a significant schedule change, which means that you can ask for a refund.
The other issue is that your ticket change happened during a turbulent time for Argentina. It was in the middle of an election, and Aerolineas Argentinas was almost certainly affected, since it is the state-owned flag carrier.
But I don’t want to make any excuses for the airline. It should have refunded you promptly. This was a direct booking, so there was no online travel agency involved. You did an excellent job of keeping a paper trail, although it was mostly emails to the airline with no response. You might have tried escalating this to one of the executives whose names I publish on elliott.org.
I contacted Aerolineas Argentinas on your behalf. A few weeks later, you sent me an update: