DALLAS (AP) -- Passengers who fail to cancel bookings on Southwest now face loss of the ticket's value if they don't show up.
In the past, there was little incentive to cancel because Southwest let customers use the value of the unused ticket toward another flight within one year. That meant seats flew empty when Southwest could have sold them to somebody else.
A Southwest Airlines spokesman says there's been no reaction yet from customers.
Southwest is still letting passengers change nonrefundable tickets ahead of time without penalty. Most other big airlines charge a $200 change fee.
Article and photo sourced from:
http://www.mercurynews.com/travel/ci_24091065/southwest-airlines-begins-enforcing-no-show-policy?source=rss