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Home » Lufthansa » 5 Ways to Beat the Upcoming Lufthansa Strike
Lufthansa

5 Ways to Beat the Upcoming Lufthansa Strike

Matthew Klint Posted onNovember 5, 2015December 5, 2016 5 Comments

Lufthansa First Class Terminal 28

Lufthansa cabin crews are preparing to strike from November 6-13, 2015 over proposed cuts to pension and retirement benefits. The planned walkout could result in significant flight cancellations to both European and intercontinental destinations. Strikes are never a walk in the park, but here are five ways to minimize any travel disruptions you may encounter.

1. Watch for Travel Waivers

Not all travel waivers are created equally. Depending upon the severity of the strike, Lufthansa may simply offering rebooking on other carriers, free date changes, or even free routing changes and refunds. Read the fine print of your travel waiver to see how much leeway you have.

The proposed strike starting Friday is not even a sure thing yet, thus you cannot even protect yourself yet if you are booked on a Lufthansa ticket. After all, Lufthansa is in no rush to clog up its phone lines with speculative flight rebookings and has gone to court to try and block the strike this week. But once the strike is announced, cancellations will rapidly follow and it is then that you want to jump on the phone or online right away to try to get yourself rebooked.

Keep an eye out for news on the strike and don’t be stuck waiting for hours on the phone if a strike is announced — do not put off re-booking.

2. Cancel Non-Essential Travel Beyond Hub Cities

When one major artery into Europe is closed, others fill up. It is down season in Europe, but remove all the Lufthansa flights and you have many passengers chasing far fewer seats. Look for Joint Venture partners like United and Air Canada to especially fill up. Thus, if you are looking for upgrades or open middle seats, you are less likely to get them during a strike (though it is very flight dependent — you may occasionally get lucky if many cancellations of feeder flights from Europe, the Middle East, and Asia lead to a glut of open on the intercontinental flight).

Things can work out very well during strikes — Frankfurt and Munich airports will be eerily quiet and lounges empty: that’s a plus. But if you are traveling beyond hub cities, delays and cancellations are almost certain and if your travel can wait, best to postpone it.

3. Re-Route Prior to Travel

Usually travel waivers are issued by travel date rather than upon whether your particular flight is affected. A strike does not necessarily lead to the cancellation of all flights, but cancellations can be rolling and my recommendation is to get yourself off Lufthansa metal if a strike is announced, even if your particular flight is not immediately cancelled or delayed.

Many of you will be on United-issued tickets and United will try to re-reoute you on its own metal first. Avoid being stranded by moving yourself preemptively off Lufthansa flights.

4. Have a Plan and Push to Be Re-Routed on Other Carriers

Lufthansa serves a handful of unique destinations that are not served by other Star Alliance partners and I have witnessed first-hand airline agents tell you that it is impossible to get you to your destination or book you on a non-Alliance carrier like Air France or British Airways if there are no other flight options. This is wrong — if you can find the right agent, you can be rebooked on any carrier with an interline agreement.

It always helps to have a plan in place. Use Expert Flyer or even Kayak or ITA Matrix to search for alternate available flights and then specifically propose them — some agents are simply not proactive but will be helpful if you spoon-feed them information.

5. Contact an Award Expert

Last, sometimes all of this can be overwhelming and not worth your time. Consulting services like my own Award Expert offer help to stranded passengers — calling the airline and rebooking on the best available schedule so you can avoid hours on the phone. Keep that in mind if time is short.

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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5 Comments

  1. Chris Reply
    November 9, 2015 at 12:16 am

    FYI – The award expert link in #5 is broken.

  2. Matthew Reply
    November 9, 2015 at 12:36 am

    Fixed. Thanks!

  3. jay_kwellin Reply
    November 9, 2015 at 10:44 pm

    My mom and I are booked on LH flying to BUD on 11/14. Because we’re going on a Viking river cruise, we used them to buy our tickets, too. So far, when we ask for options, LH punts to Viking, and Viking punts back to LH. My questions are

    1) What is the likelihood we’ll fly on the 14th, given that the strike is supposed to be over by then?
    2) What other options do we have? What can we do in advance to keep from being screwed over on the 14th?

    Thanks in advance!

  4. Matthew Reply
    November 10, 2015 at 12:35 am

    Everything will be shut down tomorrow but beyond Tuesday it is not clear what will happen. The bottom line, though, is that this is Lufthansa’s problem and you must insist that Lufthansa find you another way to Budapest. I suggest using Turkish — ask to be routed by Istanbul. A bit more flying, but better in-flgiht experience and more likely to find space.

  5. jay_kwellin Reply
    November 10, 2015 at 7:08 pm

    Thanks, Matthew!

Leave a Reply to jay_kwellin Cancel reply

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