India orders airlines to offer 60% of seats free

Change
India directed the Directorate General of Civil Aviation to require carriers to make at least 60% of seats on each flight available for selection without charge.
India orders airlines to offer 60% of seats free
Why it matters
The change removes paid seat selection as a targeted ancillary revenue source, forcing carriers to spread those costs across all passengers or other charges. That constraint reduces airlines' flexibility to cover thin operating margins amid rising fuel, airport, and maintenance costs, increasing pressure on base fares or mandatory fees.
Implications
  • Indian scheduled airlines' revenue management teams must redesign fare structures to recoup lost seat-selection revenue through higher base fares or restructured ancillary packages.
  • Indian scheduled airlines' legal teams should prepare regulatory and judicial challenges invoking the 2017 Delhi High Court ruling that limited regulator authority over unbundled service charges.

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Source

Economic Times

Topics

Policy & Regulation Regulatory Actions Markets Aerospace & Defense

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