We have all been there: Your flight is delayed for 8 hours, your hotel room looks nothing like the pictures and smells like mold, or a family emergency forces you to cancel a trip.
When you ask for your money back, customer service hits you with the dreaded phrase: "I'm sorry, but your booking was non-refundable."
Don't hang up and accept the loss. "Non-refundable" is a corporate policy, not a universal law. Depending on the circumstances—and how you ask—you can often bypass this policy and get a full refund.
Here is the exact strategy to get your money back from stubborn travel companies.
1. Know When the Law Overrides Their Policy
Airlines and hotels love quoting their "policies," but federal regulations and consumer protection laws trump corporate policy every time.
For Airlines: Under U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) rules, you are legally entitled to a full cash refund (not just a flight voucher) if:
- The airline cancels your flight for any reason.
- The airline makes a "significant schedule change" to your flight and you choose not to travel.
- You cancel your ticket within 24 hours of booking (as long as you booked at least 7 days before departure).
For Hotels: While federal laws are less strict for hotels, basic contract law applies. If the hotel fails to provide the service advertised (e.g., no hot water, severe pest infestations, or the pool was closed when advertised as open), they have breached the contract.
2. Stop Waiting on Hold. Put it in Writing.
Phone agents are trained to say no. They read from a script designed to protect the company's revenue.
To get a refund, you need to escalate the issue to corporate management, and you do that with a Formal Refund Request Letter.
A formal letter changes the dynamic. It shows you are serious, you understand your rights, and you are creating a paper trail. When a written request lands on the desk of a corporate customer relations manager, they are much more likely to issue a refund just to make the potential legal threat go away.
3. What to Include in Your Letter
Your letter needs to be factual, firm, and devoid of emotional rambling.
- The Facts: Your reservation number, dates, and exact amount paid.
- The Breach: Exactly what went wrong (e.g., "Flight UA123 was delayed by 6 hours," or "Room 402 had visible black mold.")
- The Evidence: Mention that you have attached photos of the dirty room or screenshots of the cancellation notice.
- The Demand: State clearly that you expect a full refund to your original payment method within 14 days, and that a "travel credit" is unacceptable.
4. The Nuclear Option: Chargebacks
If you sent a formal letter, waited 14 days, and they still refuse to refund you for a service they failed to provide, you have a trump card: your credit card company.
Call your bank and initiate a chargeback for "services not rendered." Because you already have a paper trail proving you tried to resolve it with the merchant (via your formal letter), the bank is highly likely to side with you and reverse the charge.
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Originally published at lettercraft.pro/blog/airline-refund
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