Holiday Complaints

Do you have a holiday complaint? For help and advice post in here.
Reply
Thanks for the info. fwh.

I've mentioned in a couple of my posts over the past year about the complexity of section 75 protection when dealing with an agent or third-party.

There's some info. buried in the Consumer Credit Act details (on the web) that I've cut and pasted in the past but I cannot understand the details fully as the wording is complex.

I hope that disreputable Tour Operators don't try to avoid responsibility by using a third-party payment agent.

The 120 day ruling is a worry if you book far in advance.
Reply
So how does the 120 day rule apply if, as was stated "It now reads "Dispute must be lodged within 120 days of the transaction date or expected date of receipt of the goods or service" ". From this I would assume that if you book in advance, for example today I book and pay with my VISA for for an October break costing over £100, then you have 120 days from the transaction date (i.e. from today) OR the expected date of receipt of the goods or service (i.e. 120 days from the abortive October break when I discover the operator has gone belly-up)?

Cheers,
Jet
Reply
I was going to ask the same question but thought the answer to be too obvious, so didn't post it.

You just beat me to it.

Mark :D
Reply
I agree that it is a little ambiguous - the problem would seem to be that the person, who booked, had, for whatever reason not been informed the company had gone bust. They tried to recover the money through the Spanish government and Air Madrid before contacting the Credit Card Company.

Booking flights from one foreign place to another - Madrid to Costa Rica - with a foreign airline is obviously one factor.

I cannot blame the CC supplier. They do offer protection, but there must be some sort of limit on their liability. The problem is that we all book many months in front. This is the first time I have ever seen this condition reported.

I think the question that needs answering is how do we stand.

An example might be that when we returned from Cyprus last October we decided to book for October this year. The deposit was made by CC - just like many others do - assuming that that gives protection. The 120 day period from the booking being made has passed. I have not however reached the date when I will receive the goods/service.

Do I still have protection?

Reading the article and the change to the T&Cs I would say I have.

I would repeat my comment from my original posting. Never ever assume what someone says is correct. Check the T&Cs and ask the CC supplier if not sure.

fwh
Reply
This is the way I read it, I'm sure someone will correct me if I've got it wrong. :lol:

When your card has be cloned or fraudulently used, then you have up to 120 days to claim "chargeback" proceedings.
However, the 120 days for goods not being delivered starts after you realise the goods won't be delivered .so, if you book a holiday 9 months in advance and the firm goes "belly up" a month before departure, then you have 120 days from the time the firm went "belly up" and you realised that you were not going to receive the goods/holiday.
Finally, a banking survey concluded that cases of claiming "chargeback" for fraudulent unauthorised transactions outside the 120 day rule is very low and you are treat no differently.

That little word "realising" makes the difference.!
click here
click here

Sanjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Reply
The problem here is that Madrid Air went bust. The customer found out two weeks before travel date. Under the T&Cs you would assume that there was no problem. The goods/service was not due to be delivered until two weeks later.

What the article does not make clear is if the claim was originally refused because 120 days had expired from booking. 120 days had expired from Madrid Air going bust or because they pursued a claim against the Spanish government and Madrid Air before informing the CC supplier.

There is a lack of information on this one.

I posted having not come across this clause before. Perhaps if there is a member of HT who has a better understanding they can advise us.

fwh
Reply
This is the link for the Air Madrid problem that is now available online.

http://travel.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/travel/your_say/article1649604.ece

fwh
Reply
Thanks for digging that out fwh - pretty conclusive that the problem was the Building Society's poorly worded internal process rather than the legislation. The customer got his money back and the 120 day limit clarified - result!

Cheers,
Jet
Reply
Holiday Truths Forum

Post a Reply

Please sign in or register an account to reply to this post.

Sign in / Register

Holiday Truths Forum Ship image

Get the best deals!

from our cruise, ski and holiday partners

You can change your email preferences at any time.

Yes, I want to save money by receiving personalised travel emails with awesome deals from Holiday Truths group companies which are hotholidays.co.uk,getrcuising.co.uk and getskiing.co.uk. By subscribing I agree to the Privacy Policy

No, thank you.