Missing a connection and don't have money to book next flight












6















What happens if I miss a connection flight and it's my fault? Let's say i got distracted or something. The airline may not book me onto the next flight because it wasn't their fault. And if I don't have the money to book another flight i'm stuck in the airport.



What would be the best course of action under these circumstances?










share|improve this question




















  • 15





    If this is a hypothetical question, then the only real answer is, "Don't do that." If it's the actual situation you're in right now, please give full details.

    – David Richerby
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby It's a hypothetical question but also a great fear I have, hence why I would like to know a pratical solution

    – Rui Fernandes
    11 hours ago






  • 19





    @RuiFernandes: don't travel if you can't afford an emergency back up plan.

    – Hilmar
    10 hours ago






  • 7





    Your question basically boils down to: Something went wrong and I need to spend money, which I didn't expected on a short notice and I don't have that money. This may happen when you are travelling, but it can happen to you in any other daily situation as well. The most obvious workaround, which will work in any situation, is to have some spare funds for unexpected, but required expenses. I thought to do so is just common sense in everyday life.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    10 hours ago








  • 6





    I think it is a fear many of us have. Either not having the money for an emergency, or not being able to access the money needed to get out of the emergency.

    – Willeke
    8 hours ago
















6















What happens if I miss a connection flight and it's my fault? Let's say i got distracted or something. The airline may not book me onto the next flight because it wasn't their fault. And if I don't have the money to book another flight i'm stuck in the airport.



What would be the best course of action under these circumstances?










share|improve this question




















  • 15





    If this is a hypothetical question, then the only real answer is, "Don't do that." If it's the actual situation you're in right now, please give full details.

    – David Richerby
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby It's a hypothetical question but also a great fear I have, hence why I would like to know a pratical solution

    – Rui Fernandes
    11 hours ago






  • 19





    @RuiFernandes: don't travel if you can't afford an emergency back up plan.

    – Hilmar
    10 hours ago






  • 7





    Your question basically boils down to: Something went wrong and I need to spend money, which I didn't expected on a short notice and I don't have that money. This may happen when you are travelling, but it can happen to you in any other daily situation as well. The most obvious workaround, which will work in any situation, is to have some spare funds for unexpected, but required expenses. I thought to do so is just common sense in everyday life.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    10 hours ago








  • 6





    I think it is a fear many of us have. Either not having the money for an emergency, or not being able to access the money needed to get out of the emergency.

    – Willeke
    8 hours ago














6












6








6








What happens if I miss a connection flight and it's my fault? Let's say i got distracted or something. The airline may not book me onto the next flight because it wasn't their fault. And if I don't have the money to book another flight i'm stuck in the airport.



What would be the best course of action under these circumstances?










share|improve this question
















What happens if I miss a connection flight and it's my fault? Let's say i got distracted or something. The airline may not book me onto the next flight because it wasn't their fault. And if I don't have the money to book another flight i'm stuck in the airport.



What would be the best course of action under these circumstances?







connecting-flights






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 8 hours ago









ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn

23k364119




23k364119










asked 11 hours ago









Rui FernandesRui Fernandes

474




474








  • 15





    If this is a hypothetical question, then the only real answer is, "Don't do that." If it's the actual situation you're in right now, please give full details.

    – David Richerby
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby It's a hypothetical question but also a great fear I have, hence why I would like to know a pratical solution

    – Rui Fernandes
    11 hours ago






  • 19





    @RuiFernandes: don't travel if you can't afford an emergency back up plan.

    – Hilmar
    10 hours ago






  • 7





    Your question basically boils down to: Something went wrong and I need to spend money, which I didn't expected on a short notice and I don't have that money. This may happen when you are travelling, but it can happen to you in any other daily situation as well. The most obvious workaround, which will work in any situation, is to have some spare funds for unexpected, but required expenses. I thought to do so is just common sense in everyday life.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    10 hours ago








  • 6





    I think it is a fear many of us have. Either not having the money for an emergency, or not being able to access the money needed to get out of the emergency.

    – Willeke
    8 hours ago














  • 15





    If this is a hypothetical question, then the only real answer is, "Don't do that." If it's the actual situation you're in right now, please give full details.

    – David Richerby
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby It's a hypothetical question but also a great fear I have, hence why I would like to know a pratical solution

    – Rui Fernandes
    11 hours ago






  • 19





    @RuiFernandes: don't travel if you can't afford an emergency back up plan.

    – Hilmar
    10 hours ago






  • 7





    Your question basically boils down to: Something went wrong and I need to spend money, which I didn't expected on a short notice and I don't have that money. This may happen when you are travelling, but it can happen to you in any other daily situation as well. The most obvious workaround, which will work in any situation, is to have some spare funds for unexpected, but required expenses. I thought to do so is just common sense in everyday life.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    10 hours ago








  • 6





    I think it is a fear many of us have. Either not having the money for an emergency, or not being able to access the money needed to get out of the emergency.

    – Willeke
    8 hours ago








15




15





If this is a hypothetical question, then the only real answer is, "Don't do that." If it's the actual situation you're in right now, please give full details.

– David Richerby
11 hours ago





If this is a hypothetical question, then the only real answer is, "Don't do that." If it's the actual situation you're in right now, please give full details.

– David Richerby
11 hours ago




1




1





@DavidRicherby It's a hypothetical question but also a great fear I have, hence why I would like to know a pratical solution

– Rui Fernandes
11 hours ago





@DavidRicherby It's a hypothetical question but also a great fear I have, hence why I would like to know a pratical solution

– Rui Fernandes
11 hours ago




19




19





@RuiFernandes: don't travel if you can't afford an emergency back up plan.

– Hilmar
10 hours ago





@RuiFernandes: don't travel if you can't afford an emergency back up plan.

– Hilmar
10 hours ago




7




7





Your question basically boils down to: Something went wrong and I need to spend money, which I didn't expected on a short notice and I don't have that money. This may happen when you are travelling, but it can happen to you in any other daily situation as well. The most obvious workaround, which will work in any situation, is to have some spare funds for unexpected, but required expenses. I thought to do so is just common sense in everyday life.

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
10 hours ago







Your question basically boils down to: Something went wrong and I need to spend money, which I didn't expected on a short notice and I don't have that money. This may happen when you are travelling, but it can happen to you in any other daily situation as well. The most obvious workaround, which will work in any situation, is to have some spare funds for unexpected, but required expenses. I thought to do so is just common sense in everyday life.

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
10 hours ago






6




6





I think it is a fear many of us have. Either not having the money for an emergency, or not being able to access the money needed to get out of the emergency.

– Willeke
8 hours ago





I think it is a fear many of us have. Either not having the money for an emergency, or not being able to access the money needed to get out of the emergency.

– Willeke
8 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















17














While this is a real fear of everyone with a connecting flight, it's actually not something that is very likely to hurt you. First, precisely because you worry about this, you're not likely to get so distracted that you forget why you are at the airport. Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights. Hearing your own name should snap you out of your daydream pretty quickly. I've even seen airline staff wandering around other gates asking people if they are the missing passenger.



On top of that, airlines have some leeway to help you out. You're right there, you're upset, and you have some sort of story to explain what happened. They will probably just take care of you for little or no charge. I've missed two planes in my life -- both in Atlanta as it happens -- and one was not my fault (taxi arrived very late then broke down on the way to airport and limped me there after a partial roadside repair) and the other was totally my fault (spaced and thought my 14:30 flight was at 4:30). In both cases I was put on the next flight no fuss no muss even though it was clearly my fault in the second case. I understand it wasn't a connection, but leeway is leeway and I am quite sure there's no "only if you had trouble actually reaching the airport" rule.



Then finally, few people who can fly cannot come up with the funds for a ticket home. Yes, putting hundreds of dollars on your credit card would hurt, and might leave you with a bunch of issues when you get home about how to pay rent or buy groceries, but you could at least get home and show up for work so you keep getting a paycheque.



However, let's pretend all these incredibly unlikely things materialize: you are on your way home with no cash, nothing in your bank account, no room on your credit card, no line of credit, nothing, and you zone out and semi-deliberately miss your flight and the airline takes no pity on you and says "$400 or sit here for the rest of your life, we don't care." You can call your family or friends. Some will be alert for a "Grandma scam" but you can probably convince someone that you're really you and you need them to go to the website of a rival airline and buy you a ticket home. (You're not going to give money to the people who wouldn't take pity on you, are you?) If you are an orphan or all your other family members are as tapped out as you, then I suppose a GoFundMe and a social media campaign are your next step, though that might take a few days.



You're far more likely to get a bad sunburn, a jellyfish sting, or food poisoning, not to mention the dreaded "caught a cold on a plane" than you are to find yourself stranded because you missed a connecting flight. If this truly worries and concerns you and you can't talk yourself out of it, spend your connection time at the outgoing gate, and check every 15 minutes that the gate hasn't changed, while never ignoring a single overhead announcement. That's what most of us do anyway, and it will protect you from this highly unlikely scenario. (At least, better than sitting in a restaurant 20 minutes from the gate drinking, ignoring announcements, etc.)






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    We talk from the point of view of the 1st world. In Asia, some companies use the dirty trickof booking on purpose flights at 00:05-00:10 to earn some extra bucks from distracted people coming at the end of the day (the next day), and so charge you around 300USD for getting into the next flight.

    – Rui F Ribeiro
    4 hours ago













  • I think I only missed a flight once because I was late getting to the airport. I was a lot poorer then and I was worried the airline would tell me "too bad, you're out of luck", but in fact, like in your case, they just put me on the next flight. In general I plan to get to the airport 2 hours before my plane leaves, so that if I do get stuck in traffic or can't find a parking space or whatever, I still have time. And I've always figured it's better to sit waiting at the airport than to sit waiting at home.

    – Mark Daniel Johansen
    4 hours ago











  • "Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights." Not necessarily. There are many airports where this doesn't happen. Indeed, I can't actually remember the last time I heard a "Passenger Fred Smith, where the heck are you?" announcement at an airport. OK, I only take about ten flights a year and they're mostly from the same airports, but you state it as if it's something that always happens, and that's definitely not the case.

    – David Richerby
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    I hear them constantly. At first it's the flight, but later it's specific people. In Europe they even add "you are delaying the flight." The only place I didn't hear such announcements was on small Pacific islands, and not all of them.

    – Kate Gregory
    4 hours ago



















7














Your options not necessarily in order of preference are:




  1. Call Family and ask


  2. Call Friends and mooch off them


  3. Setup a Gofundme and compose a tearjerker


  4. Ask random strangers at the airport


  5. Camp out at the airport until the airline or airport authorities have mercy on you (Scroll to 32:30 mark of video)


  6. If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home in a foreign airport, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will likely have to pay them back. Emergency Financial Assistance for U.S. Citizens Abroad


  7. I would have said call the airline frequent flyer/customer service number however you’ve already indicated the airline refuses to help.



Note



Because this is a connection flight you can’t rely on the flat tire rule to help you out.






share|improve this answer


























  • If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will of course have to pay them back.

    – RoboKaren
    7 hours ago











  • @RoboKaren I know the USA does that in extreme cases. Will add.

    – ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn
    7 hours ago











  • Given todays climate #1 and #2 would put you at risks of being unfairly accused of one of those scam schemes where strangers pretending to be you email your relatives/friends and beg them for money

    – Peter M
    7 hours ago



















1














Get some money. Try and find the cheapest trip home.



If you have an ID with you, ask family/friends for a Western Union remittance.



If you have no ID, the remittance with them might be possible, but the amounts allowed are limited.



Sell something you have with you. Try a pawn shop. They won't offer you a fair price, but solve your liquidity problem.



The issue here, though, is to have backup plans upfront.






share|improve this answer































    0














    Airlines often overbook flights so they won't have empty seats if someone doesn't show up. Occasionally, they'll actually 'bump' people off a flight that have a reservation because they overbooked and everybody showed up. So just because you miss your flight doesn't mean that the airline took off with an empty seat. They may have filled it with someone who would otherwise have gone on the next flight but was waiting in case someone didn't show up to go on the earlier flight. Since that guy took your seat and paid for it, they can give you the seat he would have had without losing money. I think in that case they would be more likely to allow you out on a later flight without charge. The only way to know for sure is to read the fine print of every carriers policies because those are the legally binding policies and thus the ones they're most likely to follow. Still, to be safe, I would assume it's going to cost you if you miss one and, if at all possible, have the money to purchase another ticket. If you don't, then at that point, you're homeless in an airport and it becomes security's job to remove you if you have no legal business there. The world is cruel. People become homeless not because they were able to deal with the unexpected. People become homeless because they weren't able to deal with the unexpected. You can panhandle but that's probably illegal in an airport and often illegal in most places. So the next place alot of people end up is in jail. It's called a string of cascading negative events and it can ruin lives if you don't have anyone to help you or the money to help yourself.






    share|improve this answer








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      4 Answers
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      active

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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

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      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      17














      While this is a real fear of everyone with a connecting flight, it's actually not something that is very likely to hurt you. First, precisely because you worry about this, you're not likely to get so distracted that you forget why you are at the airport. Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights. Hearing your own name should snap you out of your daydream pretty quickly. I've even seen airline staff wandering around other gates asking people if they are the missing passenger.



      On top of that, airlines have some leeway to help you out. You're right there, you're upset, and you have some sort of story to explain what happened. They will probably just take care of you for little or no charge. I've missed two planes in my life -- both in Atlanta as it happens -- and one was not my fault (taxi arrived very late then broke down on the way to airport and limped me there after a partial roadside repair) and the other was totally my fault (spaced and thought my 14:30 flight was at 4:30). In both cases I was put on the next flight no fuss no muss even though it was clearly my fault in the second case. I understand it wasn't a connection, but leeway is leeway and I am quite sure there's no "only if you had trouble actually reaching the airport" rule.



      Then finally, few people who can fly cannot come up with the funds for a ticket home. Yes, putting hundreds of dollars on your credit card would hurt, and might leave you with a bunch of issues when you get home about how to pay rent or buy groceries, but you could at least get home and show up for work so you keep getting a paycheque.



      However, let's pretend all these incredibly unlikely things materialize: you are on your way home with no cash, nothing in your bank account, no room on your credit card, no line of credit, nothing, and you zone out and semi-deliberately miss your flight and the airline takes no pity on you and says "$400 or sit here for the rest of your life, we don't care." You can call your family or friends. Some will be alert for a "Grandma scam" but you can probably convince someone that you're really you and you need them to go to the website of a rival airline and buy you a ticket home. (You're not going to give money to the people who wouldn't take pity on you, are you?) If you are an orphan or all your other family members are as tapped out as you, then I suppose a GoFundMe and a social media campaign are your next step, though that might take a few days.



      You're far more likely to get a bad sunburn, a jellyfish sting, or food poisoning, not to mention the dreaded "caught a cold on a plane" than you are to find yourself stranded because you missed a connecting flight. If this truly worries and concerns you and you can't talk yourself out of it, spend your connection time at the outgoing gate, and check every 15 minutes that the gate hasn't changed, while never ignoring a single overhead announcement. That's what most of us do anyway, and it will protect you from this highly unlikely scenario. (At least, better than sitting in a restaurant 20 minutes from the gate drinking, ignoring announcements, etc.)






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        We talk from the point of view of the 1st world. In Asia, some companies use the dirty trickof booking on purpose flights at 00:05-00:10 to earn some extra bucks from distracted people coming at the end of the day (the next day), and so charge you around 300USD for getting into the next flight.

        – Rui F Ribeiro
        4 hours ago













      • I think I only missed a flight once because I was late getting to the airport. I was a lot poorer then and I was worried the airline would tell me "too bad, you're out of luck", but in fact, like in your case, they just put me on the next flight. In general I plan to get to the airport 2 hours before my plane leaves, so that if I do get stuck in traffic or can't find a parking space or whatever, I still have time. And I've always figured it's better to sit waiting at the airport than to sit waiting at home.

        – Mark Daniel Johansen
        4 hours ago











      • "Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights." Not necessarily. There are many airports where this doesn't happen. Indeed, I can't actually remember the last time I heard a "Passenger Fred Smith, where the heck are you?" announcement at an airport. OK, I only take about ten flights a year and they're mostly from the same airports, but you state it as if it's something that always happens, and that's definitely not the case.

        – David Richerby
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        I hear them constantly. At first it's the flight, but later it's specific people. In Europe they even add "you are delaying the flight." The only place I didn't hear such announcements was on small Pacific islands, and not all of them.

        – Kate Gregory
        4 hours ago
















      17














      While this is a real fear of everyone with a connecting flight, it's actually not something that is very likely to hurt you. First, precisely because you worry about this, you're not likely to get so distracted that you forget why you are at the airport. Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights. Hearing your own name should snap you out of your daydream pretty quickly. I've even seen airline staff wandering around other gates asking people if they are the missing passenger.



      On top of that, airlines have some leeway to help you out. You're right there, you're upset, and you have some sort of story to explain what happened. They will probably just take care of you for little or no charge. I've missed two planes in my life -- both in Atlanta as it happens -- and one was not my fault (taxi arrived very late then broke down on the way to airport and limped me there after a partial roadside repair) and the other was totally my fault (spaced and thought my 14:30 flight was at 4:30). In both cases I was put on the next flight no fuss no muss even though it was clearly my fault in the second case. I understand it wasn't a connection, but leeway is leeway and I am quite sure there's no "only if you had trouble actually reaching the airport" rule.



      Then finally, few people who can fly cannot come up with the funds for a ticket home. Yes, putting hundreds of dollars on your credit card would hurt, and might leave you with a bunch of issues when you get home about how to pay rent or buy groceries, but you could at least get home and show up for work so you keep getting a paycheque.



      However, let's pretend all these incredibly unlikely things materialize: you are on your way home with no cash, nothing in your bank account, no room on your credit card, no line of credit, nothing, and you zone out and semi-deliberately miss your flight and the airline takes no pity on you and says "$400 or sit here for the rest of your life, we don't care." You can call your family or friends. Some will be alert for a "Grandma scam" but you can probably convince someone that you're really you and you need them to go to the website of a rival airline and buy you a ticket home. (You're not going to give money to the people who wouldn't take pity on you, are you?) If you are an orphan or all your other family members are as tapped out as you, then I suppose a GoFundMe and a social media campaign are your next step, though that might take a few days.



      You're far more likely to get a bad sunburn, a jellyfish sting, or food poisoning, not to mention the dreaded "caught a cold on a plane" than you are to find yourself stranded because you missed a connecting flight. If this truly worries and concerns you and you can't talk yourself out of it, spend your connection time at the outgoing gate, and check every 15 minutes that the gate hasn't changed, while never ignoring a single overhead announcement. That's what most of us do anyway, and it will protect you from this highly unlikely scenario. (At least, better than sitting in a restaurant 20 minutes from the gate drinking, ignoring announcements, etc.)






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        We talk from the point of view of the 1st world. In Asia, some companies use the dirty trickof booking on purpose flights at 00:05-00:10 to earn some extra bucks from distracted people coming at the end of the day (the next day), and so charge you around 300USD for getting into the next flight.

        – Rui F Ribeiro
        4 hours ago













      • I think I only missed a flight once because I was late getting to the airport. I was a lot poorer then and I was worried the airline would tell me "too bad, you're out of luck", but in fact, like in your case, they just put me on the next flight. In general I plan to get to the airport 2 hours before my plane leaves, so that if I do get stuck in traffic or can't find a parking space or whatever, I still have time. And I've always figured it's better to sit waiting at the airport than to sit waiting at home.

        – Mark Daniel Johansen
        4 hours ago











      • "Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights." Not necessarily. There are many airports where this doesn't happen. Indeed, I can't actually remember the last time I heard a "Passenger Fred Smith, where the heck are you?" announcement at an airport. OK, I only take about ten flights a year and they're mostly from the same airports, but you state it as if it's something that always happens, and that's definitely not the case.

        – David Richerby
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        I hear them constantly. At first it's the flight, but later it's specific people. In Europe they even add "you are delaying the flight." The only place I didn't hear such announcements was on small Pacific islands, and not all of them.

        – Kate Gregory
        4 hours ago














      17












      17








      17







      While this is a real fear of everyone with a connecting flight, it's actually not something that is very likely to hurt you. First, precisely because you worry about this, you're not likely to get so distracted that you forget why you are at the airport. Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights. Hearing your own name should snap you out of your daydream pretty quickly. I've even seen airline staff wandering around other gates asking people if they are the missing passenger.



      On top of that, airlines have some leeway to help you out. You're right there, you're upset, and you have some sort of story to explain what happened. They will probably just take care of you for little or no charge. I've missed two planes in my life -- both in Atlanta as it happens -- and one was not my fault (taxi arrived very late then broke down on the way to airport and limped me there after a partial roadside repair) and the other was totally my fault (spaced and thought my 14:30 flight was at 4:30). In both cases I was put on the next flight no fuss no muss even though it was clearly my fault in the second case. I understand it wasn't a connection, but leeway is leeway and I am quite sure there's no "only if you had trouble actually reaching the airport" rule.



      Then finally, few people who can fly cannot come up with the funds for a ticket home. Yes, putting hundreds of dollars on your credit card would hurt, and might leave you with a bunch of issues when you get home about how to pay rent or buy groceries, but you could at least get home and show up for work so you keep getting a paycheque.



      However, let's pretend all these incredibly unlikely things materialize: you are on your way home with no cash, nothing in your bank account, no room on your credit card, no line of credit, nothing, and you zone out and semi-deliberately miss your flight and the airline takes no pity on you and says "$400 or sit here for the rest of your life, we don't care." You can call your family or friends. Some will be alert for a "Grandma scam" but you can probably convince someone that you're really you and you need them to go to the website of a rival airline and buy you a ticket home. (You're not going to give money to the people who wouldn't take pity on you, are you?) If you are an orphan or all your other family members are as tapped out as you, then I suppose a GoFundMe and a social media campaign are your next step, though that might take a few days.



      You're far more likely to get a bad sunburn, a jellyfish sting, or food poisoning, not to mention the dreaded "caught a cold on a plane" than you are to find yourself stranded because you missed a connecting flight. If this truly worries and concerns you and you can't talk yourself out of it, spend your connection time at the outgoing gate, and check every 15 minutes that the gate hasn't changed, while never ignoring a single overhead announcement. That's what most of us do anyway, and it will protect you from this highly unlikely scenario. (At least, better than sitting in a restaurant 20 minutes from the gate drinking, ignoring announcements, etc.)






      share|improve this answer













      While this is a real fear of everyone with a connecting flight, it's actually not something that is very likely to hurt you. First, precisely because you worry about this, you're not likely to get so distracted that you forget why you are at the airport. Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights. Hearing your own name should snap you out of your daydream pretty quickly. I've even seen airline staff wandering around other gates asking people if they are the missing passenger.



      On top of that, airlines have some leeway to help you out. You're right there, you're upset, and you have some sort of story to explain what happened. They will probably just take care of you for little or no charge. I've missed two planes in my life -- both in Atlanta as it happens -- and one was not my fault (taxi arrived very late then broke down on the way to airport and limped me there after a partial roadside repair) and the other was totally my fault (spaced and thought my 14:30 flight was at 4:30). In both cases I was put on the next flight no fuss no muss even though it was clearly my fault in the second case. I understand it wasn't a connection, but leeway is leeway and I am quite sure there's no "only if you had trouble actually reaching the airport" rule.



      Then finally, few people who can fly cannot come up with the funds for a ticket home. Yes, putting hundreds of dollars on your credit card would hurt, and might leave you with a bunch of issues when you get home about how to pay rent or buy groceries, but you could at least get home and show up for work so you keep getting a paycheque.



      However, let's pretend all these incredibly unlikely things materialize: you are on your way home with no cash, nothing in your bank account, no room on your credit card, no line of credit, nothing, and you zone out and semi-deliberately miss your flight and the airline takes no pity on you and says "$400 or sit here for the rest of your life, we don't care." You can call your family or friends. Some will be alert for a "Grandma scam" but you can probably convince someone that you're really you and you need them to go to the website of a rival airline and buy you a ticket home. (You're not going to give money to the people who wouldn't take pity on you, are you?) If you are an orphan or all your other family members are as tapped out as you, then I suppose a GoFundMe and a social media campaign are your next step, though that might take a few days.



      You're far more likely to get a bad sunburn, a jellyfish sting, or food poisoning, not to mention the dreaded "caught a cold on a plane" than you are to find yourself stranded because you missed a connecting flight. If this truly worries and concerns you and you can't talk yourself out of it, spend your connection time at the outgoing gate, and check every 15 minutes that the gate hasn't changed, while never ignoring a single overhead announcement. That's what most of us do anyway, and it will protect you from this highly unlikely scenario. (At least, better than sitting in a restaurant 20 minutes from the gate drinking, ignoring announcements, etc.)







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 7 hours ago









      Kate GregoryKate Gregory

      59.9k10162258




      59.9k10162258








      • 1





        We talk from the point of view of the 1st world. In Asia, some companies use the dirty trickof booking on purpose flights at 00:05-00:10 to earn some extra bucks from distracted people coming at the end of the day (the next day), and so charge you around 300USD for getting into the next flight.

        – Rui F Ribeiro
        4 hours ago













      • I think I only missed a flight once because I was late getting to the airport. I was a lot poorer then and I was worried the airline would tell me "too bad, you're out of luck", but in fact, like in your case, they just put me on the next flight. In general I plan to get to the airport 2 hours before my plane leaves, so that if I do get stuck in traffic or can't find a parking space or whatever, I still have time. And I've always figured it's better to sit waiting at the airport than to sit waiting at home.

        – Mark Daniel Johansen
        4 hours ago











      • "Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights." Not necessarily. There are many airports where this doesn't happen. Indeed, I can't actually remember the last time I heard a "Passenger Fred Smith, where the heck are you?" announcement at an airport. OK, I only take about ten flights a year and they're mostly from the same airports, but you state it as if it's something that always happens, and that's definitely not the case.

        – David Richerby
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        I hear them constantly. At first it's the flight, but later it's specific people. In Europe they even add "you are delaying the flight." The only place I didn't hear such announcements was on small Pacific islands, and not all of them.

        – Kate Gregory
        4 hours ago














      • 1





        We talk from the point of view of the 1st world. In Asia, some companies use the dirty trickof booking on purpose flights at 00:05-00:10 to earn some extra bucks from distracted people coming at the end of the day (the next day), and so charge you around 300USD for getting into the next flight.

        – Rui F Ribeiro
        4 hours ago













      • I think I only missed a flight once because I was late getting to the airport. I was a lot poorer then and I was worried the airline would tell me "too bad, you're out of luck", but in fact, like in your case, they just put me on the next flight. In general I plan to get to the airport 2 hours before my plane leaves, so that if I do get stuck in traffic or can't find a parking space or whatever, I still have time. And I've always figured it's better to sit waiting at the airport than to sit waiting at home.

        – Mark Daniel Johansen
        4 hours ago











      • "Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights." Not necessarily. There are many airports where this doesn't happen. Indeed, I can't actually remember the last time I heard a "Passenger Fred Smith, where the heck are you?" announcement at an airport. OK, I only take about ten flights a year and they're mostly from the same airports, but you state it as if it's something that always happens, and that's definitely not the case.

        – David Richerby
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        I hear them constantly. At first it's the flight, but later it's specific people. In Europe they even add "you are delaying the flight." The only place I didn't hear such announcements was on small Pacific islands, and not all of them.

        – Kate Gregory
        4 hours ago








      1




      1





      We talk from the point of view of the 1st world. In Asia, some companies use the dirty trickof booking on purpose flights at 00:05-00:10 to earn some extra bucks from distracted people coming at the end of the day (the next day), and so charge you around 300USD for getting into the next flight.

      – Rui F Ribeiro
      4 hours ago







      We talk from the point of view of the 1st world. In Asia, some companies use the dirty trickof booking on purpose flights at 00:05-00:10 to earn some extra bucks from distracted people coming at the end of the day (the next day), and so charge you around 300USD for getting into the next flight.

      – Rui F Ribeiro
      4 hours ago















      I think I only missed a flight once because I was late getting to the airport. I was a lot poorer then and I was worried the airline would tell me "too bad, you're out of luck", but in fact, like in your case, they just put me on the next flight. In general I plan to get to the airport 2 hours before my plane leaves, so that if I do get stuck in traffic or can't find a parking space or whatever, I still have time. And I've always figured it's better to sit waiting at the airport than to sit waiting at home.

      – Mark Daniel Johansen
      4 hours ago





      I think I only missed a flight once because I was late getting to the airport. I was a lot poorer then and I was worried the airline would tell me "too bad, you're out of luck", but in fact, like in your case, they just put me on the next flight. In general I plan to get to the airport 2 hours before my plane leaves, so that if I do get stuck in traffic or can't find a parking space or whatever, I still have time. And I've always figured it's better to sit waiting at the airport than to sit waiting at home.

      – Mark Daniel Johansen
      4 hours ago













      "Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights." Not necessarily. There are many airports where this doesn't happen. Indeed, I can't actually remember the last time I heard a "Passenger Fred Smith, where the heck are you?" announcement at an airport. OK, I only take about ten flights a year and they're mostly from the same airports, but you state it as if it's something that always happens, and that's definitely not the case.

      – David Richerby
      4 hours ago





      "Second, the airline pages people who are in danger of missing their flights." Not necessarily. There are many airports where this doesn't happen. Indeed, I can't actually remember the last time I heard a "Passenger Fred Smith, where the heck are you?" announcement at an airport. OK, I only take about ten flights a year and they're mostly from the same airports, but you state it as if it's something that always happens, and that's definitely not the case.

      – David Richerby
      4 hours ago




      1




      1





      I hear them constantly. At first it's the flight, but later it's specific people. In Europe they even add "you are delaying the flight." The only place I didn't hear such announcements was on small Pacific islands, and not all of them.

      – Kate Gregory
      4 hours ago





      I hear them constantly. At first it's the flight, but later it's specific people. In Europe they even add "you are delaying the flight." The only place I didn't hear such announcements was on small Pacific islands, and not all of them.

      – Kate Gregory
      4 hours ago













      7














      Your options not necessarily in order of preference are:




      1. Call Family and ask


      2. Call Friends and mooch off them


      3. Setup a Gofundme and compose a tearjerker


      4. Ask random strangers at the airport


      5. Camp out at the airport until the airline or airport authorities have mercy on you (Scroll to 32:30 mark of video)


      6. If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home in a foreign airport, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will likely have to pay them back. Emergency Financial Assistance for U.S. Citizens Abroad


      7. I would have said call the airline frequent flyer/customer service number however you’ve already indicated the airline refuses to help.



      Note



      Because this is a connection flight you can’t rely on the flat tire rule to help you out.






      share|improve this answer


























      • If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will of course have to pay them back.

        – RoboKaren
        7 hours ago











      • @RoboKaren I know the USA does that in extreme cases. Will add.

        – ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn
        7 hours ago











      • Given todays climate #1 and #2 would put you at risks of being unfairly accused of one of those scam schemes where strangers pretending to be you email your relatives/friends and beg them for money

        – Peter M
        7 hours ago
















      7














      Your options not necessarily in order of preference are:




      1. Call Family and ask


      2. Call Friends and mooch off them


      3. Setup a Gofundme and compose a tearjerker


      4. Ask random strangers at the airport


      5. Camp out at the airport until the airline or airport authorities have mercy on you (Scroll to 32:30 mark of video)


      6. If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home in a foreign airport, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will likely have to pay them back. Emergency Financial Assistance for U.S. Citizens Abroad


      7. I would have said call the airline frequent flyer/customer service number however you’ve already indicated the airline refuses to help.



      Note



      Because this is a connection flight you can’t rely on the flat tire rule to help you out.






      share|improve this answer


























      • If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will of course have to pay them back.

        – RoboKaren
        7 hours ago











      • @RoboKaren I know the USA does that in extreme cases. Will add.

        – ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn
        7 hours ago











      • Given todays climate #1 and #2 would put you at risks of being unfairly accused of one of those scam schemes where strangers pretending to be you email your relatives/friends and beg them for money

        – Peter M
        7 hours ago














      7












      7








      7







      Your options not necessarily in order of preference are:




      1. Call Family and ask


      2. Call Friends and mooch off them


      3. Setup a Gofundme and compose a tearjerker


      4. Ask random strangers at the airport


      5. Camp out at the airport until the airline or airport authorities have mercy on you (Scroll to 32:30 mark of video)


      6. If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home in a foreign airport, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will likely have to pay them back. Emergency Financial Assistance for U.S. Citizens Abroad


      7. I would have said call the airline frequent flyer/customer service number however you’ve already indicated the airline refuses to help.



      Note



      Because this is a connection flight you can’t rely on the flat tire rule to help you out.






      share|improve this answer















      Your options not necessarily in order of preference are:




      1. Call Family and ask


      2. Call Friends and mooch off them


      3. Setup a Gofundme and compose a tearjerker


      4. Ask random strangers at the airport


      5. Camp out at the airport until the airline or airport authorities have mercy on you (Scroll to 32:30 mark of video)


      6. If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home in a foreign airport, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will likely have to pay them back. Emergency Financial Assistance for U.S. Citizens Abroad


      7. I would have said call the airline frequent flyer/customer service number however you’ve already indicated the airline refuses to help.



      Note



      Because this is a connection flight you can’t rely on the flat tire rule to help you out.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 7 hours ago

























      answered 8 hours ago









      ThE iLlEgAl aLiEnThE iLlEgAl aLiEn

      23k364119




      23k364119













      • If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will of course have to pay them back.

        – RoboKaren
        7 hours ago











      • @RoboKaren I know the USA does that in extreme cases. Will add.

        – ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn
        7 hours ago











      • Given todays climate #1 and #2 would put you at risks of being unfairly accused of one of those scam schemes where strangers pretending to be you email your relatives/friends and beg them for money

        – Peter M
        7 hours ago



















      • If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will of course have to pay them back.

        – RoboKaren
        7 hours ago











      • @RoboKaren I know the USA does that in extreme cases. Will add.

        – ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn
        7 hours ago











      • Given todays climate #1 and #2 would put you at risks of being unfairly accused of one of those scam schemes where strangers pretending to be you email your relatives/friends and beg them for money

        – Peter M
        7 hours ago

















      If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will of course have to pay them back.

      – RoboKaren
      7 hours ago





      If you’re a citizen of another country and missed your flight home, your embassy might lend you funds to get back to your home country. You will of course have to pay them back.

      – RoboKaren
      7 hours ago













      @RoboKaren I know the USA does that in extreme cases. Will add.

      – ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn
      7 hours ago





      @RoboKaren I know the USA does that in extreme cases. Will add.

      – ThE iLlEgAl aLiEn
      7 hours ago













      Given todays climate #1 and #2 would put you at risks of being unfairly accused of one of those scam schemes where strangers pretending to be you email your relatives/friends and beg them for money

      – Peter M
      7 hours ago





      Given todays climate #1 and #2 would put you at risks of being unfairly accused of one of those scam schemes where strangers pretending to be you email your relatives/friends and beg them for money

      – Peter M
      7 hours ago











      1














      Get some money. Try and find the cheapest trip home.



      If you have an ID with you, ask family/friends for a Western Union remittance.



      If you have no ID, the remittance with them might be possible, but the amounts allowed are limited.



      Sell something you have with you. Try a pawn shop. They won't offer you a fair price, but solve your liquidity problem.



      The issue here, though, is to have backup plans upfront.






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        Get some money. Try and find the cheapest trip home.



        If you have an ID with you, ask family/friends for a Western Union remittance.



        If you have no ID, the remittance with them might be possible, but the amounts allowed are limited.



        Sell something you have with you. Try a pawn shop. They won't offer you a fair price, but solve your liquidity problem.



        The issue here, though, is to have backup plans upfront.






        share|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1







          Get some money. Try and find the cheapest trip home.



          If you have an ID with you, ask family/friends for a Western Union remittance.



          If you have no ID, the remittance with them might be possible, but the amounts allowed are limited.



          Sell something you have with you. Try a pawn shop. They won't offer you a fair price, but solve your liquidity problem.



          The issue here, though, is to have backup plans upfront.






          share|improve this answer













          Get some money. Try and find the cheapest trip home.



          If you have an ID with you, ask family/friends for a Western Union remittance.



          If you have no ID, the remittance with them might be possible, but the amounts allowed are limited.



          Sell something you have with you. Try a pawn shop. They won't offer you a fair price, but solve your liquidity problem.



          The issue here, though, is to have backup plans upfront.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 2 hours ago









          Pierre BPierre B

          31919




          31919























              0














              Airlines often overbook flights so they won't have empty seats if someone doesn't show up. Occasionally, they'll actually 'bump' people off a flight that have a reservation because they overbooked and everybody showed up. So just because you miss your flight doesn't mean that the airline took off with an empty seat. They may have filled it with someone who would otherwise have gone on the next flight but was waiting in case someone didn't show up to go on the earlier flight. Since that guy took your seat and paid for it, they can give you the seat he would have had without losing money. I think in that case they would be more likely to allow you out on a later flight without charge. The only way to know for sure is to read the fine print of every carriers policies because those are the legally binding policies and thus the ones they're most likely to follow. Still, to be safe, I would assume it's going to cost you if you miss one and, if at all possible, have the money to purchase another ticket. If you don't, then at that point, you're homeless in an airport and it becomes security's job to remove you if you have no legal business there. The world is cruel. People become homeless not because they were able to deal with the unexpected. People become homeless because they weren't able to deal with the unexpected. You can panhandle but that's probably illegal in an airport and often illegal in most places. So the next place alot of people end up is in jail. It's called a string of cascading negative events and it can ruin lives if you don't have anyone to help you or the money to help yourself.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                0














                Airlines often overbook flights so they won't have empty seats if someone doesn't show up. Occasionally, they'll actually 'bump' people off a flight that have a reservation because they overbooked and everybody showed up. So just because you miss your flight doesn't mean that the airline took off with an empty seat. They may have filled it with someone who would otherwise have gone on the next flight but was waiting in case someone didn't show up to go on the earlier flight. Since that guy took your seat and paid for it, they can give you the seat he would have had without losing money. I think in that case they would be more likely to allow you out on a later flight without charge. The only way to know for sure is to read the fine print of every carriers policies because those are the legally binding policies and thus the ones they're most likely to follow. Still, to be safe, I would assume it's going to cost you if you miss one and, if at all possible, have the money to purchase another ticket. If you don't, then at that point, you're homeless in an airport and it becomes security's job to remove you if you have no legal business there. The world is cruel. People become homeless not because they were able to deal with the unexpected. People become homeless because they weren't able to deal with the unexpected. You can panhandle but that's probably illegal in an airport and often illegal in most places. So the next place alot of people end up is in jail. It's called a string of cascading negative events and it can ruin lives if you don't have anyone to help you or the money to help yourself.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  Airlines often overbook flights so they won't have empty seats if someone doesn't show up. Occasionally, they'll actually 'bump' people off a flight that have a reservation because they overbooked and everybody showed up. So just because you miss your flight doesn't mean that the airline took off with an empty seat. They may have filled it with someone who would otherwise have gone on the next flight but was waiting in case someone didn't show up to go on the earlier flight. Since that guy took your seat and paid for it, they can give you the seat he would have had without losing money. I think in that case they would be more likely to allow you out on a later flight without charge. The only way to know for sure is to read the fine print of every carriers policies because those are the legally binding policies and thus the ones they're most likely to follow. Still, to be safe, I would assume it's going to cost you if you miss one and, if at all possible, have the money to purchase another ticket. If you don't, then at that point, you're homeless in an airport and it becomes security's job to remove you if you have no legal business there. The world is cruel. People become homeless not because they were able to deal with the unexpected. People become homeless because they weren't able to deal with the unexpected. You can panhandle but that's probably illegal in an airport and often illegal in most places. So the next place alot of people end up is in jail. It's called a string of cascading negative events and it can ruin lives if you don't have anyone to help you or the money to help yourself.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.










                  Airlines often overbook flights so they won't have empty seats if someone doesn't show up. Occasionally, they'll actually 'bump' people off a flight that have a reservation because they overbooked and everybody showed up. So just because you miss your flight doesn't mean that the airline took off with an empty seat. They may have filled it with someone who would otherwise have gone on the next flight but was waiting in case someone didn't show up to go on the earlier flight. Since that guy took your seat and paid for it, they can give you the seat he would have had without losing money. I think in that case they would be more likely to allow you out on a later flight without charge. The only way to know for sure is to read the fine print of every carriers policies because those are the legally binding policies and thus the ones they're most likely to follow. Still, to be safe, I would assume it's going to cost you if you miss one and, if at all possible, have the money to purchase another ticket. If you don't, then at that point, you're homeless in an airport and it becomes security's job to remove you if you have no legal business there. The world is cruel. People become homeless not because they were able to deal with the unexpected. People become homeless because they weren't able to deal with the unexpected. You can panhandle but that's probably illegal in an airport and often illegal in most places. So the next place alot of people end up is in jail. It's called a string of cascading negative events and it can ruin lives if you don't have anyone to help you or the money to help yourself.







                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






                  New contributor




                  earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  answered 1 hour ago









                  earlphlegmearlphlegm

                  1




                  1




                  New contributor




                  earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.





                  New contributor





                  earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






                  earlphlegm is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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