Tagged Pages Archive | Wow Air
2019
28
March
WOW Air Collapses, Ceases All Flight Operations - What You Can Do
28
March
After months of struggling, it's official, Icelandic budget airline WOW Air has ceased all operations.
The airline announced early this morning that it had ended all operations effective immediately, and canceled all remaining flights.
What travelers with WOW Air bookings can do
WOW has set up a page with recommendations for those passengers who are booked on flights that will now never take off.
For starters, you can request a chargeback from the credit card company that you booked your flight with.
For those who have traveled recently with a WOW flight, and need a flight home, WOW Air recommends requesting 'rescue fares' from other airlines. These are discounted fares that other airlines offer when an airline goes under.
WOW says it will publish information on these potential options shortly. Update: A list of airlines offering rescue fares is now available.
Icelandair has set up a page with options for stranded WOW Air passengers that were due to return between March 28 and April 11.
If you purchased trip insurance or paid for the flight with a credit card that had trip coverage, it should cover any unforeseen expenses due to the cancellations.
What happened to WOW?
It's been a long drop for WOW, who burst onto the scene with rock-bottom fares to Europe and unique branding.
The consensus seems to be that they grew too fast, launching flights from more than a dozen U.S. cities, and from 3 here in Canada (besides Toronto and Montreal, they were briefly available for purchase from Vancouver).
But around last fall, it became clear that trouble lay ahead for WOW. Icelandair backed away from a takeover of WOW not once, but twice. So did Indigo Partners, a hedge fund that is known for turning around struggling budget airlines.
By December of 2018, WOW was forced to cancel many of it's U.S. routes and sell nearly half of their aircraft. It was around this time I stopped posting deals from WOW, as it felt probable that flights from Canada could also be cancelled.
After a period of high fuel prices, times have been tough for budget airlines. WOW Air isn't the first trans-Atlantic budget carrier to collapse, as we saw with Primera Air here in Canada last October.
Norwegian Air, currently offering flights out of Montreal, is also known to be struggling.
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2018
30
October
Montreal to Reykjavik, Iceland - $221 CAD (personal item) to $347 CAD (checked bag) roundtrip | off-season flights
30
October
2018
23
August
Montreal to Reykjavik, Iceland - $190 CAD (personal item) to $316 CAD (checked bag) roundtrip including taxes
23
August
2018
9
July
Montreal to Reykjavik, Iceland - $259 CAD (base price) to $387 CAD (checked bag) roundtrip including taxes | non-stop flights
9
July
2018
31
May
Montreal to Reykjavik, Iceland - $253 CAD (base price) to $381 CAD (checked bag) roundtrip including taxes | non-stop flights
31
May
2018
31
May
Montreal to Stockholm, Sweden - $313 (base price) to $493 (checked bag) roundtrip
31
May
2018
15
May
WOW Air starts offering fares from Montreal to New Delhi, India - $776 roundtrip with a checked bag
15
May
2018
19
April
Montreal to Stockholm, Sweden or Lyon, France - $322 (carry-on) to $500 (checked bag) roundtrip
19
April
2018
10
April
Montreal to Reykjavik, Iceland - $282 CAD (carry-on) to $408 CAD (checked bag) roundtrip including taxes
10
April
2018
10
January
Montreal to Tel Aviv, Israel - $347 CAD roundtrip (without luggage) to $527 CAD roundtrip (with luggage)
10
January