In article ,
Graham Harrison wrote:
>>Cut-and-pasted from the confirmation email for a BA e-ticket I bought
>>for someone else (dated Nov 25, 2008):
>>``Please remember you must bring the card used to pay for this booking
>>to the airport with you, for verification, before you can travel.''
>
>Don't care what it says.
You don't. But BA does, sporadically. For example, I was asked to show
the credit card used to pay for the ticket when checking in at Gatwick.
>Badly worded.
Which part of ``Please remember you must bring the card used to pay
for this booking to the airport with you, for verification, before
you can travel'' do you find unclear?
>However, they are well aware that
>passengers buy tickets for one another and they know which card has been
>used for payment *and* who the cardholder is so that they do *not* ask for
>the card from someone who is not the cardholder.
Of course. That's why they recommend that the cardholder bring the
card to the airport (or, according to BA's phone representative,
city ticket office) for verification at any time before travel.
>I've purchased
>tickets for other people from New York to Milan and Stockholm to Geneva to
>name but two and they've never come anywhere near the UK, much less London.
Indeed, I have never seen this enforced anywhere except London.
But in London, I was asked for the card and saw this happen to
other people.
>It's a non issue. It's totally doable.
Yes, it's doable, as long as you bring the card used to pay for the
booking to the airport with you, for verification, before you travel.
Enforcement is sporadic, so you may very well get away without card
verification. But then again you may not, especially if checking in
in London. The fact of the matter that BA's e-ticket receipt
clearly says:
``Please remember you must bring the card used to pay for this booking
to the airport with you, for verification, before you can travel.''
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