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Home » Air France » Avoiding Fuel Surcharges to Europe on Air France/KLM Flying Blue
Air FranceAward TravelJetBlueKLM

Avoiding Fuel Surcharges to Europe on Air France/KLM Flying Blue

Matthew Klint Posted onNovember 4, 2012December 9, 2016 7 Comments

Last time Air France/KLM offered a promotion for purchased miles in their Flying Blue loyalty program, I outlined some strategies for avoiding costly fuel surcharges when redeeming your points. Nothing has changed, but I just want to point out again that Flying Blue program really has some great deals avaiable, even when only going to Europe.

When Air France/KLM pulled most of their premium award space from partner availability earlier this fall, the Flying Blue program became the only place you could consistently find award space on KLM or Air France flights from U.S. cities to Europe and back. That remains the case, though you are still looking at high fuel surcharges of about $450 each way.

The beauty of Flying Blue is that you can purchase one-way travel for half the round trip price and you can purchase flights right up until departure–I had no problem recently issuing a same-day ticket from New York to Paris for a client online. But if your dates are flexible, look for Delta award space, which does not carry a fuel surcharge. Take a look at this–

 air-france-klm-no-fuel-surcharge-on-delta-flights

 click image to enlarge

That’s right–only $28 if you fly via Venice compared to $447 if you fly non-stop on Air France.

So even to Europe, you can get some great deals from Flying Blue (and remember that Israel in the Europe zone, so a business class ticket is 50K AMEX miles one-way with taxes under $100 if you fly on Delta).

In directing more clients to Flying Blue of late, I have also discovered a downside to the program–the Flying Blue call center. Folks, it is bad. Just as bad as BA if not worse, merely because the agents are clueless. The agents are kinder than the ones at British Airways, but terribly inefficient, as the whole programs seems to be.

I had to cancel a trip for a client and the website would not allow a cancellation. So I called in, waited 20 minutes on hold, and cancelled the flights. It took the agent about 20 minutes to do, but she said the process was done and a refund was on the way. The taxes were supposed to have been returned to my credit card and the miles re-deposited. A week went by and it never happened, so I called back again yesterday.

After an extended time on hold while an agent consulted with her supervisor, I was instructed to write a letter to Flying Blue requesting a refund and fax it to their office–a 519 area code in Ontario, Canada. I haven’t done it yet–I will call again on Monday and see if this can be straightened out over the phone. That’s almost as inefficent as booking an award ticket with Korean Airlines..

So the point of this post is that you can get some great deals on Flying Blue even to Europe, but book online and avoid dealing with their inept call center if at all possible.

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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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7 Comments

  1. Magnus Reply
    November 4, 2012 at 3:33 am

    Great tip, but how do you get those connecting flights to appear when searching for a Flying Blue award? I’m looking for a one way flight from AMS to IAH early June 2013, but the only results of my search is the direct flight.

  2. Matthew Reply
    November 4, 2012 at 3:47 am

    HI Magnus,

    When there is not any Delta space available with reasonable connections, the FlyingBlue search engine will not show it. It is not surprising that Delta has released no saver award space for next June.

  3. Zach Reply
    November 6, 2012 at 10:20 pm

    I love the Israel as Europe part, I have not been able to capitalize on it yet but I may one of these days.

    I thought Delta always had low fuel fees even if booked through FlyingBlue. Learn something new everyday.

  4. Lee Reply
    November 6, 2012 at 11:38 pm

    I have also used the AF promo awards at 50% discount to defray some of the high fuel surcharge. Alitalia and Aeroflot can be flown as well with low fuel surcharges if the routes make economic sense.

  5. Asdfddddf Reply
    November 7, 2012 at 2:33 pm

    Uselless post

    If Della has low avail can just use SM

    If they don’t FB still expensive so no point

    Duhhhhhh

  6. Matthew Reply
    November 7, 2012 at 3:23 pm

    Sorry, a r/t Delta ticket to Israel cost 120K Skymiles at the low level. A Flying Blue ticket costs 100K Flying Blue points. Plus, AF’s website is so much easier to work with with Delta, making award space much easier to find for the average person. Furthermore, Air France allows one-way awards at half the r/t price while Delta does not.

    And next time, try proofreading before posting.

  7. Jetstream007 Reply
    November 9, 2012 at 10:51 pm

    Did you try to call the AMS callcenter? Over the last years I called them, they usually did a good job and seem to know their way around.

    You can cancel a reward tickt up to one hour before the flight (not @ the 50% promorate, €45 @classic and no cost @flexrate, but the flexrate is a crazy amount of miles, but they wil actually giv eyou the last seat on the plane). So when I was flying on different tickets (US domestic and ICA on KLM) and because of a delay I couldn’t make the flight I got my 50K miles back AND was given the option (which is not by the book) to switch to another KLM flight that I could make. Good service.

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