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Home » Frontier » Plucky The Parrot Grounded: Frontier Airlines Refused Return Flight For Emotional Support Bird
Emotional Support Animal (ESA)Frontier

Plucky The Parrot Grounded: Frontier Airlines Refused Return Flight For Emotional Support Bird

Matthew Klint Posted onApril 11, 2025April 11, 2025 8 Comments

a woman sitting in an airplane with a baby carrier

Her first airplane trip in six years did not go as planned after Maria Fraterrigo was told by Frontier Airlines that she could return to New York City, but not her emotional support parrot, despite having no issues on the outbound flight with her pet bird.

Frontier Airlines Is For The Birds: Budget Carrier Backs Down, Lets Emotional Support Parrot Fly Home to NYC

For years, Fraterrigo and her husband made an annual pilgrimage to Puerto Rico to visit friends and family. In 2019, she lost her husband and has not traveled since then, but her son talked into her into it.

So this year, 81-year-old Fraterrigo flew to San Juan (SJU) with her African gray parrot, Plucky, on her shoulder.

Her son Robert had used the online chat feature to confirm with Frontier Airlines the bird would be allowed onboard. A chat transcript revealed that an agent had said there would be on trouble traveling with her emotional support bird as long as he brought a doctor’s note (“Okay that’s awesome. That is all she needs to bring and show to the airport.”)

On January 4, Fraterrigo and Plucky flew to San Juan with no issues.

But three months later, the return did not go quite so smoothly.

As Robert shares, “They started yelling and screaming at my mom and saying, ‘You’re not getting on board with the bird. You want to get on the plane, leave the bird behind.’”

That’s actually what she should have been told from the start. Frontier stopped transporting “emotional support animals” in 2020 and has a clear exclusion for parrots on its website:

  • A few things to know about traveling with pets in the cabin:

    • Domesticated dogs, cats, rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters, or small household birds may be carried on flights within the United States.
    • The following species are never accepted: Large birds (e.g. parrots, macaws, cockatoos, birds of prey), rodents (including mice, rats, squirrels), beavers, ferrets, reptiles (including snakes), amphibians, spiders, and insects (and please, no lions, tigers, or bears).

With Frontier seemingly refusing to budge, Robert looked into private jet options:

“It’s an island — can’t go drive there and pick her up. There was no boats that were going to take her back. None of the major airlines would take her back. Our last resort was a private jet, and that’s not cheap. That’s not cheap at all. And my mom was not leaving the island without that bird.”

But after intense media pressure and direct intervention from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D – NY) this week, Frontier relented and allowed Fraterrigo to return home with Plucky. That strikes me as reasonable, but only because it transported Plucky on the outbound journey.

CONCLUSION

One of my real viral stories on Live and Let’s Fly was a story about an emotional support peacock…while airlines are no longer compelled to require emotional support animals onboard, Frontier allowed Plucky onboard for the outbound journey and it strikes me as reasonable that Plucky be allowed back.

As for the general madness over emotional support birds on airplanes…well, we have bigger birds to pluck these days.

Start spreading the plumes news, we’re leaving today…

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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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8 Comments

  1. surfer Reply
    April 11, 2025 at 1:35 pm

    emotional support parrot? are we serious? plucky the parrot? like c’mon now.

    these people need to just admit this is a scam.

  2. ScooterLAX Reply
    April 11, 2025 at 1:37 pm

    Cheers to you, Frontier. We need to stop allowing and enabling this rank stupidity. Can I bring an emotional support hooker if she sits on my face…I mean lap the whole flight? I will get a note if need be.

  3. Jerry Reply
    April 11, 2025 at 2:08 pm

    We don’t always see eye-to-eye on dogs on planes, but I’ll give you this one. A parrot is just a bridge too far.

  4. Maryland Reply
    April 11, 2025 at 2:22 pm

    This is an elderly woman. Why she decided to vacation with an expensive parrot. ( on Frontier) I can’t understand. But they got her there and it’s only fair to return both pet and passenger home. Doubt this will start a trend. Good luck to Plucks.

  5. Robb Reply
    April 11, 2025 at 7:27 pm

    This whole “emotional support pet” has gotten totally out of hand. If you’re that emotionally unstable stay home. It’s to the point that people were taking their “emotional support pet” into our grocery stores and putting them in the cart where the next unsuspecting Customer would put their groceries. :/

    • Maryland Reply
      April 11, 2025 at 7:43 pm

      This happened to me about 2 weeks ago. Judy a pit bull with cropped ears wearing a service vest jumped into my cart full of groceries. Gross. This was the second time it happened with this dog. I love dogs but I was unhappy. Owner dude thinks it’s cute and judy is just ” friendly”.

  6. emercycrite Reply
    April 12, 2025 at 1:39 am

    Gross. At some stage these people should be put down. Like the parrot.

  7. Tony N. Reply
    April 12, 2025 at 6:50 pm

    People can be emotionally attached to their parrots. But please do this at home.

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