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The Inlaws are coming.....
Hi
We are looking to land with our children on the 3rd June 2010 at Halifax. The wife and I are going on a return trip 3 weeks prior to sort things out. House, bank accounts, car, meet and greets etc. Will we have to activate visa at this point or do it when we come back three weeks later? My wife's parents want to come with us to help settle in etc. They are looking to book a one way ticket stay for up to a month then get a flight down to Houston to see my wifes brother then from Texas fly home at some point.... Question would they have any problems with arriving with a one way ticket? or should they book the flight onto Texas as well? This will then restrict the time they can stay or make them stay longer!!:ohmy: Thanks John |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by johngrimes
(Post 8206927)
Question would they have any problems with arriving with a one way ticket? or should they book the flight onto Texas as well? This will then restrict the time they can stay or make them stay longer!!:ohmy:
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Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Just get them to buy a one way fully refundable, fully changeable ticket for the return. Once plans are definite, cancel and refund it.
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Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
why would you buy a one way ticket? will cost a right bloody fortune, then to get one that is refundable will cost more as you usually lose a percentage of it.
Get a ticket to Halifax, then connection to Houston then back to UK...nothing to it. One way tickets are for citizens and PR holders... |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Depends who they are thinking of flying with etc. One way tickets on charters are simply half the cost of a return, unlike the scheduled airlines. So if they are planning on coming into Canada like this and really don't want to commit to a return date etc. then the refundable ticket would get around the entry to Canada problem - which is all I was suggesting. I did suggest a fully refundable ticket, so there would be NO penalty for cancelling it. If they are planning on using a scheduled airline to come to Canada, then a return - even if they throw it away would be better.
If they are likely to come back for another similar trip in the near future, then i would look at nesting a US-UK-US ticket within the UK-CAN-UK ticket in some way. |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by lmartin999
(Post 8207168)
Depends who they are thinking of flying with etc. One way tickets on charters are simply half the cost of a return, unlike the scheduled airlines. So if they are planning on coming into Canada like this and really don't want to commit to a return date etc. then the refundable ticket would get around the entry to Canada problem - which is all I was suggesting. I did suggest a fully refundable ticket, so there would be NO penalty for cancelling it. If they are planning on using a scheduled airline to come to Canada, then a return - even if they throw it away would be better.
If they are likely to come back for another similar trip in the near future, then i would look at nesting a US-UK-US ticket within the UK-CAN-UK ticket in some way. To do the route the OP is asking about, it could be structured with a mixture of charters and scheduled. However this way you end up with different baggage allowances and possible delays. I would suggest getting an agent to book the ticket for you on scheduled carriers, it may cost a bit more, but they have access to far more information and experience in these matters. |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by The Aviator
(Post 8207537)
Charters don't generally (I have never seen it at all) offer refundable tickets and on scheduled airlines refundable tickets are full price fares (no discounts).
To do the route the OP is asking about, it could be structured with a mixture of charters and scheduled. However this way you end up with different baggage allowances and possible delays. I would suggest getting an agent to book the ticket for you on scheduled carriers, it may cost a bit more, but they have access to far more information and experience in these matters. <deckchair, popcorn> |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by Novocastrian
(Post 8207546)
Err, you might be surprised.
<deckchair, popcorn> |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by The Aviator
(Post 8207554)
Always willing to be surprised. That's what I keep telling the wife, has not worked yet though.
It's just that monsieur martin knows a thing or two about flight ticketing. |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by The Aviator
(Post 8207537)
Charters don't generally (I have never seen it at all) offer refundable tickets and on scheduled airlines refundable tickets are full price fares (no discounts).
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Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by lmartin999
(Post 8207570)
I would agree. My comment was that if the OP's parents were intending to come in on a cheap charter then the fully refundable sched ticket would offer a way to avoid any hassles coming into the country. I wasnt suggesting they actually fly on it :) It wasn't a recommendation as to the most economical way to ticket the proposed itn. Were it me, I would just book two AC tickets - and if necessary pay the change fee on the return leg from Canada. Again, if they are planning on visiting again then you could get more creative. Flights ex-US are generally better priced than ex-Canada even on AC.
<changes channel> |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by Novocastrian
(Post 8207562)
G'wan, she's called Shirley innit?
It's just that monsieur martin knows a thing or two about flight ticketing. |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
Originally Posted by Novocastrian
(Post 8207583)
What no fight?
<changes channel> |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
My parents came out with us last December when we arrived and they had a one way ticket. They intended to book the return from here once they knew we were settled etc.
No problems at YVR! |
Re: The Inlaws are coming.....
One interesting way to do it would be to come out on a cheap charter.
Then book a ticket from YHZ to HOU (no premium for one way on NA flights) when here. Then to get back to the UK book a HOU-LHR return ticket on AC. This allows a connection (though not a stopover sadly) in YHZ. However, if they want to come back to YHZ they can use the return part of the ticket (LHR-YHZ-HOU) and throw away (quietly!) the YHZ-HOU leg. Flights ex-US are significantly cheaper than ex-CAN. If you can find routings with stopovers it works great. I used to use LAX as a way to get to YVR - cheaper and I got to spend a night in LA. Harder to find stopovers on cheaper tickets though. |
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