Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
But they haven't said how many. A lot of the BRS-NCL route flights are operated by NCL-based aircraft. It's highly unlikely that this route would cease so that would mean a change in published timings if all the flights were operated by BRS-based aircraft for the coming winter.Although they are closing the hubs at STN, SEN, NCL they will still be flying routes from those airports.
When flying on Easyjet holiday routes from Bristol (outside school holidays) I have noticed that a high percentage of passengers are in the older age range. Will these passengers be more wary about travel after Covid? They seem to be cautious about resuming other actvities outside the house, and may also be unwilling to resume flying.Their track record at BRS suggests that the airline recognises it as an important base serving as it does one of the most economically vibrant areas of the country, which is also home to a large reservoir of often comfortably-off leisure travellers who have the means and will to travel.
Probably, or at least some will not want to travel and I'm sure that type of passenger is not confined to BRS, which is no doubt one of the many reasons why airlines believe it will take 2-3 years for the industry to return to pre-pandemic levels of passenger traffic.When flying on Easyjet holiday routes from Bristol (outside school holidays) I have noticed that a high percentage of passengers are in the older age range. Will these passengers be more wary about travel after Covid? They seem to be cautious about resuming other actvities outside the house, and may also be unwilling to resume flying.
I've just updated the Movements thread for today and included in the post that a random check of the easyJet seat selector (the 186-seat A320 seems to be the type being used) suggests that the sun routes and BFS are seeing 70-80% occupancy this week but that GLA and EDI are much lower. Obviously the seat selector can only be a rough guide.I note that frequencies on many sun routes have been increased in the last day for flights in August - pmi and fao for example. Second weekly lpa has also been re introduced
When flying on Easyjet holiday routes from Bristol (outside school holidays) I have noticed that a high percentage of passengers are in the older age range. Will these passengers be more wary about travel after Covid? They seem to be cautious about resuming other actvities outside the house, and may also be unwilling to resume flying.
More destinations being re added for August - kos , Isle of Man and hurghada have all been added today
Seville. , Nantes and La Rochelle all back in August
Seville, Isle of Man and Hurghada are bookable from early September. easyJet seems more cautious than Ryanair as already shown with far fewer flights restarting at the moment and with Ryanair's Seville route from BRS already operating.All the above now removed again - weird because people were booking them
On 5 July easyJet refunded the money for my outstanding flights. I applied for this refund on 24 May. So they took 56 days from the date of my claim for the refund of my first booking and 42 days for the second. I accept that they were operating under a huge amount of pressure under unprecedented citcumstances.I've been informed by easyJet today that the refund for my cancelled flights that should have taken place in March has now been actioned and returned to my credit card. I applied for the refund on 23 April so although it's taken longer than their target of 28 days it's well within the 90 day 'backstop' that they mentioned when they confirmed receipt of my refund application.
I am still awaiting a refund for cancelled flights that should have operated at the end of last month but I'm not expecting anyting there for a a couple of months.
The real answer lies in the ability to contact easyJet and receive a meaningful reply. I can't suggest how that can be done, I'm afraid. You've apparently exhausted all obvious avenues.I wonder if anyone on here knows the answer to my question? I have tried contacting easyJet in every way imaginable but they never answer.
I was supposed to be flying to Milan in August from Sunday to Sunday however the flight is now showing as sold out, which I believe to mean they don’t know whether it’s going to operate or not.
Monday to Monday flights are on sale and are cheaper than what I paid for my Sunday to Sunday flights. If I was to book 4 seats now it would cost around £190 whereas I paid £333 last year.
However when I go into My easyJet and go through the ‘change flights’ process the cost of the flight goes up from £20-£32 and it doesn’t give any indication that I will get child prices either. Incredibly the child price for Bristol to Milan is £6.99.
Has anyone had any experience of this? Would I be better off booking new flights and banking on getting a refund in due course on my Sunday to Sunday flights? Why should rescheduling My flights be more expensive than booking new flights?
Further to my previous post, easyJet now has this note on its booking engine website:The real answer lies in the ability to contact easyJet and receive a meaningful reply. I can't suggest how that can be done, I'm afraid. You've apparently exhausted all obvious avenues.
Looking at the easyjet calendar on BRS-MXP for August they are only showing flights on Mondays and Fridays. A test booking for August for this route shows that the Sunday and Wednesday flights are all shown as 'sold out' (as you point out) with Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays showing 'no flights available' as there never were any for those days.
easyJet has been adopting the practice of showing flights for which some seats had been previously sold but which they subsequently considered unlikely to operate as 'sold out'. Then, a couple of weeks or so before the flight was due to operate, it would be altered to 'no flights available' and an email sent to those customers who had booked prior to the 'sold out' notice telling them it had been cancelled and offering alternatives, with the preferred for easyJet being a switch to another date or a voucher to use in the future. Cash refunds were available too but the path to them on the website is not as clear.
The chances are that your MXP flights will be cancelled but until they are you are obviously in limbo. The easyJet booking calendar shows no flights operating on Sundays (or Wednesdays) in August so no-one else is going to look to book on those days and they couldn't anyway because they are shown as 'sold out'.
I don't know why easyJet has been leaving it so late to cancel flights they must have known would not operate by initially labelling them 'sold out'. Why not cancel them at the point they say they are 'sold out' when no further bookings can be made? I can only think they are doing so to try to spread out the claims for refunds or date switches which seems odd because some people, if given sufficient notice of a cancelled flight, might switch to another date, but when the airline leaves it almost to the last minute to officially cancel a flight some of those people might decide on a cash refund instead, which is not what easyJet wants.
I'm sorry I can't be of any practical help. I sense your intense frustration. I know I would be.
Subscribe to help support your favourite forum and in return we'll remove all our advertisements. Your contribution will help to pay for things like site maintenance, domain name renewals and annual server charges.