Airlines may price seats based on your ZIP code, your travel habits or your marital status — a
practice Sen. Al Franken on Tuesday urged the U.S. Department of
Transportation to further regulate.
The
federal agency last year gave the airlines permission to use
“personalized pricing,” which allows the industry to charge one consumer
more than another for the same seat on the same flight based on
collected personal information.
The rule, supported by the
airline industry and business travel groups, prohibits companies from
using consumer-provided information to discriminate against consumers
based on “race, creed, color, sex, religious or political affiliation,
disability or national origin,” according to the federal agency.
But,
it is technically legal for airlines to use other types of information
to tailor prices — or in Franken’s word, discriminate — based on
consumers’ income level, marital status and trip purpose.
Franken noted in his letter, signed by four other Democratic senators,
that business travelers with the same flying routine could be charged
more based on habit. Likewise, Franken said, people living in
high-income ZIP codes may get better fares to entice them to book more
tickets, over consumers living in low-income neighborhoods.
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