Lufthansa Group may be trying to alleviate the concerns of travel agents and corporate travel professionals over its plan to put a €16 distribution cost charge (DCC) on any booking that isn't made ...
BERLIN (Reuters) - Lufthansa (LHAG.DE) is about to take a bold step to boost profits by charging a fee for tickets booked through third parties, hoping new technology and greater price transparency ...
U.S. travelers can now purchase tickets on Lufthansa directly within the Google Flights desktop and mobile applications. The addition of the service, called “Book on Google,” means that Google Flights ...
ASTA is warning travel agents that the $17.50 booking surcharge that Lufthansa Group will implement on Sept. 1 will be nonrefundable, even on fully refundable tickets. “Prior to ticketing, the travel ...
The Lufthansa Group has decided it will become the latest airline to try to buck the established system of buying tickets. The airline group announced Tuesday that beginning on Sept. 1, 2015, it will ...
Lufthansa, Germany’s largest airline, wants you to book a “Lufthansa Surprise” and, no, that is not in Urban Dictionary (we checked). The surprise feature lets open-minded travelers skip the burden of ...
Photo Credit: A Lufthansa Airbus A320-200 at Frankfurt Airport. From October 1, tickets bought via third-parties tech for flights on Lufthansa Group airlines will be hit with a $21 in the U.S. (€19 in ...
Lufthansa Group announced a new distribution strategy on Tuesday that de-emphasizes the global distribution channel in favor of direct bookings on its online consumer portals and its new travel agent ...
You can’t blame Lufthansa for seeking new ways to pad profits, but its latest move to add a "distribution cost charge" of €16 to every booking made through a “global distribution system” (i.e.