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How did readers get bills of up to £206 for calling British Airways?

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Looking at reader reports there are, at the moment, big delays in getting through to British Airways on the telephone if you don’t have elite status. Even if you do have a Gold card, service still appears to be far worse than it was.

This may be linked to the pingdemic, but it is also true that the call centres are moving to a new telephone system. Irrespective of the reasons, many people are spending an hour on the phone in a queue and then being automatically cut off.

If you’ve called an 0344 number, this is annoying but isn’t expensive. If you’ve called an 0844 number from a mobile, the cost can be horrendous.

The reader stories below have different causes and don’t even relate to the same entity – some are about British Airways and some are about BA Holidays. The problem is the same though – the use of 0844 numbers.

The BA Holidays 0344 number has an 0844 version with crazy pricing

The standard BA Holidays contact number is 0344 493 0787. This is charged at local rates and, on a mobile, will be covered by your inclusive minutes.

Unfortunately, there are two versions of this telephone number.

  • 0344 493 0787 is charged at standard local rates
  • 0844 493 0787 is charged at premium rates

The first report I received about excessive charges was from reader A who was charged £206:

“A warning about the BA Holidays call centre. I usually only book flights through BA but because of the double points offer I booked hotels as well. BA cancelled my flight to Porto with no alternative offered so I had to call them. Took most of a day, then when I received my O2 bill, it was for £206!! Seemingly Holidays uses a premium number.”

I looked on the BA Holidays website and it only shows the 0344 version. It turned out that reader A had initially called BA Executive Club and it was BAEC who gave her the 0844 number for BA Holidays. This was an expensive mistake. She was also not given the necessary warnings by Executive Club about the cost of the call – although these warnings are very ambiguous as we will see.

(UPDATE: Reader A dropped me a note this morning to say that, on my advice, she made a formal complaint to BA Holidays. They agreed to refund her £206 and the money was paid the next day, so full marks to BA Holidays for resolving this.)

British Airways executive club call centre premium rates

British Airways itself is no better

Here is an email from reader M who spent £148.90:

“If booking an open jaw Avios flight you MUST phone BA – you cannot do this online. The number the Executive Club and the BA website direct you to is 0844 493 0747.

This directs to a call centre in Manchester which I have just been told IS NOT MANNED. One of two things happen – you wait in queue for an hour then they disconnect you (ALL BA calls disconnect after one hour even if you are talking to a human being at that point so make sure to tell them to call you back at the start of the call) or they won’t even put you in a queue – a pre recorded message tells you they are very busy and to try again later and they disconnect you.

I only found this out by calling BA direct on 0344 493 0787. I spoke to two different staff and they confirmed this regarding the Manchester call centre. They said to either call the 787 number and asked to be transferred to a manned Avios centre (which worked twice for me albeit after 16 minutes and 56 minute waits but it worked) or to call the Warrington Avios call centre direct which is manned on 0800 597 7580.

After six days, 29 phone calls, 7hrs 40mins on phone and £148.90 in additional phone bills I got an alternative flight booked.”

Here is reader J:

“I know you have an in into BA.  Can you ask them how I’m supposed to use Future Travel Vouchers when it’s impossible to get through to the Executive Club? I’ve spent £88 so far in phones calls waiting before getting cut off.”

Here is reader S:

“I probably sound like an idiot but trying to contact BA Executive Club at their request cost me £35. They told me that the number is 0844 493 0747 at 7p a minute but if I had called 0344 493 0747 it is free. I feel scammed by BA. I tried for many hours over five days to speak to them.”

Reader S was lucky – she was calling from her home landline so there was no ‘access charge’. As we will show, she would have paid up to £350 had she called on a mobile.

Here is a comment sent to me on Twitter:

“I give up on Executive Club. I’ve phoned them 19 times in the last five days costing me over £30 in call fees. I’ve been cut off EVERY SINGLE TIME. I hae an Avios flight booked for two days time that I need to cancel.”

Reader T emailed to say:

“BA Executive Club number is advertised as 0844 and is 7p/min plus my mobile operator charges 45p/min. I had a £65 bill which covered 2 hours on the line. I wrongly expected 0844/0845 to be within my inclusive minutes.”

Huge telephone bills ringing British Airways

BA only pockets 7p per minute, so where does the money go?

ba.com says the following about calls to its 0844 numbers:

“Calls cost 7p per minute plus your phone company’s access charge”

Arguably British Airways will claim that a rate of 7p per minute is acceptable – albeit with many people sat on the telephone for an hour and then getting cut off with a £4.20 bill, it probably isn’t.

However, what percentage of people are calling from a landline?

Here is Vodafone’s price checker tool. Type in 0844 493 0787 and you’ll see that ‘pay monthly’ customers are charged a shocking 65p per minute, plus the 7p that BA receives. ‘Pay as you go’ customers get the ‘bargain’ price of 45p per minute plus the 7p service charge.

This means you would pay £43.20 on a Vodafone mobile for the privilege of spending an hour in the queue to British Airways, just to get cut off at the 60 minute mark.

What calls does BA charge at premium rates?

Here is the ‘Contact Us’ page on ba.com.

For ‘Make a new booking or check prices for flights, holidays, hotels, car hire or upgrades’ you are given the 0844 number.

However, under ‘Enquire about changes to an existing flight booking’ you are given the identical number but the 0344 ‘local rates’ version.

0344 numbers are also given for:

  • Enquire about an existing holiday, hotel or car hire booking
  • Help with special meals and name corrections
  • Get help with seating and baggage enquiries
  • Enquire about group travel bookings
  • Enquire about refunds for flight bookings
  • Enquire about refunds for holiday, hotel or car hire bookings
  • Other enquiries including Advanced Passenger Information (API)
  • Contact Customer Relations
  • Help with your delayed baggage
  • Get help with baggage claims

Reader comments below suggest that it is an offence to use 0844 numbers for anything except new business acquisition. Our first reader with the £206 was definitely misled by BA Executive Club, since she was dealing with an existing BA Holidays booking but was told to call an 0844 number.

The £148.90 ‘open jaw’ flight booking made by our reader was, to be fair, a fresh booking for which the rate is stated at ‘7p plus your mobile operators access charge’. However, as you can’t make open jaw bookings online, the reader had no choice but to call.

If the call was answered quickly and the booking made within a few minutes, then even 72p per minute via Vodafone may be (just about) acceptable. However, as it is virtually impossible to get your call answered quickly at the moment, and there is a very high chance that you will be cut off after an hour with no answer, it simply isn’t on.

What should British Airways do?

At the very, very least, British Airways should make it clear to callers that the ‘access charge’ for 0844 numbers is likely to be many multiples of the 7p base charge that is quoted.

I doubt anyone who reads the line “Calls cost 7p per minute plus your phone company’s access charge” would expect the ‘access charge’ element to be as high as 65p per minute.

It also shows a level of contempt for the customer. Basically, BA is so desperate to pocket 7p per minute from your call that it doesn’t make any real attempt to warn you that you could be paying Vodafone 65p per minute.

The fact that various parts of BA are verbally giving out 0844 numbers without saying they are premium rate and knowing that 0344 free versions exist is also unpalatable. It is also potentially an offence if these numbers are knowingly given to existing customers.

The bottom line is that, unless you have status, British Airways call centres have been (unavoidably, admittedly) offering a poor level of service during the pandemic. It appears to have got even worse in recent weeks.

To continue to charge people up to 72p per minute and then expect them to sit in a queue for an hour before being cut off is not acceptable. All 0844 numbers should be suspended immediately until BA is able to offer a high quality service.


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Comments (159)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Peter says:

    I mean have those people never used a phone before? I can’t remember the last time I paid for a premium call thanks to the EU.
    It’s like complaining that they paid £500 for buying something but that someone else found it reduced for £100.

  • Reader S says:

    Thank you for highlighting this Rob. I thought I was alone in my stupidity! I was eventually told by BT when I checked my bill that BA had the 2 prefixes 0344, 0844. I feel particularly aggrieved because I had no cause to call BA. They contacted me by email requesting I call in or my flight booking might be at risk. They gave me a link to the 0844 number. After many hours and £35, luckily on a landline, it transpired it was all a lot of admin nonsense about me paying for seat selection with avios during the recent offer. I have lost so much confidence in Executive Club over this. I hope BA reads your article with shame. Your readers are being charged a fortune to listen to that dreadful music for hours. Thanks again

  • Roger Cormack says:

    In response to many messages here, while there are many helpful suggestions on how to avoid these excessive charges, the point really is that BA should not be attempting to treat us customers this way. There is no excuse for any customer-centric business to use paid call numbers, and there is no excuse for the poor call-centre service except, perhaps, at the start of the pandemic. Since then, the under-staffing has been a conscious and cynical attempt to increase profits by intentionally deteriorating customer service.

    • JDB says:

      The one thing BA isn’t doing is increasing profits. They are still losing c.£150m/week. While there is no real excuse for this terrible customer service, particularly when the poor IT requires so many quite simple transactions on the telephone, BA and all airlines are still in crisis mode. They are having to roster call centre staff essentially to deal with refunds, rebooking, cancellations etc. so there is very little new cash coming into the business. When people talk about the company’s ‘cash pile’ that is really their overdraft facility and in the absence of the US opening, the end of furlough and the upcoming quieter winter season they are going to be burning through cash at a frightening rate. Virgin, with all its new Caribbean flights will be operating a much higher % of its pre Covid schedule than BA.

      • Rob says:

        Virgin’s new Caribbean flights are not ‘new’. What they don’t tell you when they announce these routes is that they are mainly tags – Grenadines is now a tag on Barbados IIRC rather than a direct service etc.

  • Ls says:

    I believe UK261 requires covering the cost of a phone call. If flights are cancelled, these costs should be charged straight back to BA.

  • Benilyn says:

    Any guidelines on how to complain? I accidentally did it with non BA.

    • NFH says:

      Yes, you can first complain to the business and demand reimbursement of the call charge pursuant to the contractual term created by Regulation 41(2) of the Consumer Contracts (Information, Cancellation and Additional Charges) Regulations 2013. If the business refuses, then you can issue a County Court claim via http://www.moneyclaim.gov.uk.

  • sharon says:

    Thanks for that information. Very useful. BA had requested I called them about my seating ( I later discovered)

  • Stephanie says:

    Had this experience last week and yesterday. I have an avios flight I need to cancel, and I also need to apply an evoucher to a BA holidays booking (can’t do this online, only with flight only). First time I’d just gotten through at 10 minutes to an advisor, then got cut off… but that was Vodafone as I hit my £10 spending cap on off plan calls which alerted me to the 0800 issue. Since then I’ve added the Vodafone bolt on for 0800 numbers, but got cut off again yesterday at about 15 minutes just as I was talking to an actual person, according to Vodafone that was due to a ‘surge’ in signal availability. I feel like the call centre ‘remember’ your number as well, as if you try calling back immediately after being cut off, I don’t get through to the call at all.
    I will contact them from my office phone later in the week!

    • NFH says:

      A Vodafone bolt-on for 0800 numbers? 0800 numbers are free from all UK lines – landlines and mobiles. Why would you need a bolt-on?

  • Alex Sm says:

    Rob, thanks a lot for running this article – it balances up well the Friday one and just shows how ruthless BA could be when it deals with customers’ money…

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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