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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Business

Flyers snap up ultra-cheap tickets after IT glitch

Passengers wait to check in for All Nippon Airways flights at Haneda airport in Tokyo in April 2022. (Photo: AFP)

TOKYO: Eagle-eyed travellers snapped up heavily discounted tickets in the fanciest cabins on All Nippon Airways after a currency conversion blunder, with one paying just $890 for first-class flights from Jakarta to the Caribbean via Tokyo and New York, and back again.

That 14,500-kilometre journey would typically cost nearly 20 times as much in first class on ANA. Others grabbed tickets in business class for just a few hundred dollars instead of the usual $10,000 or so, with news of the glitch spreading on social media platforms. 

ANA Holdings said on Wednesday that the mistake stemmed from an error on its Vietnam website, which listed an erroneous currency conversion. It did not say how many people had secured discount tickets and said it was “investigating the cause of the bug and the size of its damage”.

An ANA spokesperson initially said the airline would honour the tickets for those who bought them, but the carrier said later that a final decision had not been made, adding that one would be reached before the end of the month.

The discounted tickets will still be valid for the people who fly before that decision is made. 

Most of the tickets were for travel from Jakarta to Japan and then to New York and back again to various Southeast Asian destinations, including Singapore and Bali, according to several people who spoke with Bloomberg News.  

Herman Yip, who runs a travel website, said he bagged the round-trip first-class ticket from Jakarta to Aruba in the Caribbean via Tokyo and New York. 

Johnny Wong, who works in the airline industry, said he booked a return ticket in business class from Jakarta to Honolulu via Tokyo for 13 million dong ($550). 

“I never thought I’d catch such a deal,” Wong said. The 29-year-old said he felt under pressure to enter his details as fast as he could, racing against time before ANA realised its error. The fare is now $8,200.

It isn’t the first time an airline has inadvertently sold premium seats at a steep discount.

Cathay Pacific Airways accidentally sold first- and business-class tickets from Vietnam to the US in 2019 for as little as $675 when the normal price would have been as much as $16,000. It honoured those fares.

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