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Appeals Court Blocks Airline ‘Junk Fee’ Rule



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An appeals court argued that the rule “likely exceeds the DOT’s authority and would irreparably harm airlines.”

A U.S. appeals court struck down the Department of Transportation’s rule that would require airlines to disclose all fees upfront, pending a full review of the rule. 

The DOT released a final rule in April that would mandate airlines to disclose “junk fees” associated with purchasing airfare. Airlines and ticketing agencies would have to inform passengers of the fees associated with checked baggage, carry-ons, along with changes and cancellations to a reservation. 

Airlines would also need to end “bait-and-switch” discount practices, prohibiting carriers from advertising a discount that’s based solely off low airfare and doesn’t disclose other mandatory fees. 

A three-judge panel on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals said Monday that the rule “likely exceeds the DOT’s authority and would irreparably harm airlines.”

The case will be heard during the next available oral argument panel, the ruling said. 

“DOT will continue defending our rule that protects consumers from surprise fees that can unexpectedly jack up the price of air travel,” the DOT said in a statement. “Nothing in the Court’s decision prevents airlines from voluntarily complying with this common sense rule that simply requires them to keep their customers fully informed when buying a plane ticket.”

An Overreach for the DOT?

Airlines for America, along with American, Delta, United, JetBlue and Hawaiian filed a lawsuit against the DOT over the junk fee rule in May, arguing that the junk fee rule was a regulatory overreach that would create more confusion for customers. 

Airlines for America also argued that carriers would need to “spend millions” to update their websites, diverting resources away from other initiatives. 

The appeals court said that only Congress could give the DOT the authority to institute such a rule, and the current FAA Reauthorization Act makes no mention of disclosing junk fees. 

The ruling is a major setback for the Biden administration, which has taken a hawkish stance when it comes to passenger rights. Under President Joe Biden, the DOT also created a passenger rights dashboard and has been pushing airlines to guarantee free family seating. 

Airlines Raise Checked Baggage Fees

The department’s crackdown on fee disclosures also comes as airlines have started raising prices for some ancillary services, like checked baggage. American, United, JetBlue and Frontier have raised checked baggage prices, citing the need to keep up with higher operating costs. 

Airlines made around $7.1 billion from baggage fees in 2023, an increase from $6.8 billion in 2022, according to DOT data. The DOT argued that the junk fee disclosure rule would save passengers $543 million per year. 

Airlines Sector Stock Index Performance Year-to-Date

What am I looking at? The performance of airline sector stocks within the ST200. The index includes companies publicly traded across global markets including network carriers, low-cost carriers, and other related companies.

The Skift Travel 200 (ST200) combines the financial performance of nearly 200 travel companies worth more than a trillion dollars into a single number. See more airlines sector financial performance. 

Read the full methodology behind the Skift Travel 200.



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