{"slug": "united-changed-my-flight-but-never-told-me-now-im-out-2000", "title": "United changed my flight but never told me. Now, I’m out $2,000", "summary": "United Airlines changed a family's return itinerary from Australia without proper notification, leading to $2,000 in out-of-pocket costs for replacement tickets. The airline failed to coordinate with partner carriers, leaving passengers stranded and refusing refunds for undelivered business class upgrades.", "body_md": "**Getting your**\n\n[Trinity Audio](//trinityaudio.ai)player ready...**Q:** I recently experienced what can only be described as a travel nightmare with United Airlines. I had booked flights from San Francisco to Auckland, New Zealand, and back through Cairns, Australia, for my family of four. We purchased business class upgrades using 30,000 miles and a $600 copay per passenger. The outbound trip went smoothly, but our return became a disaster.\n\nAt 1 a.m. in Cairns, I checked the United app and discovered my 74-year-old mother’s status on the Cairns-Brisbane flight had changed to “waitlisted.” I immediately called United customer service. A representative told me the flight was “not operating” and rerouted all four of us through Sydney instead.\n\nWhen we arrived at Cairns Airport, Virgin Australia, which operated the first leg of our return flight, told us only my mother had a confirmed ticket. The rest of us had nothing. I called United again. An agent said Qantas had my ticket but couldn’t explain what that meant. Qantas couldn’t find any reservation without a confirmation number, which I didn’t have. United then offered a three-way call with Qantas but disconnected, leaving me stranded.\n\nWhile I was on the phone trying to sort this out, the flight departed without us. The next United agent claimed we had seats on a flight from Sydney, but couldn’t explain how we were supposed to get there from Cairns. Qantas staff at the airport were dismissive and refused to help.\n\nFeeling unwell and desperate to get home, I purchased four one-way tickets on Virgin Australia from Cairns to Sydney for nearly $890, plus $60 in baggage fees. When we reached Sydney, I learned United had canceled our tickets because we didn’t board the assigned Qantas flight — which never appeared in my app, email or texts. The Sydney United staff were helpful and rebooked us, but our business class upgrades were gone.\n\nUnited claims they sent a schedule change notification weeks before to the email addresses on file. I never received it. When I contacted United’s customer service, a representative offered $100 travel certificates and said the matter was closed. United refuses to refund the $1,800 in upgrade fees or reimburse the tickets I had to buy.\n\nI’ve been a loyal United customer for years. How can they change my itinerary, fail to properly communicate it, force me to buy new tickets, and then refuse to make things right?\n\n*— Krupa Singampalli, Union City, Calif.*\n\n**A:** You paid United for a service it didn’t deliver. That’s the bottom line here.\n\nWhen an airline makes a schedule change, it has a legal obligation to notify passengers. United claims it sent an email before your flight. But a single email sent six weeks before departure — especially for a complex international itinerary involving partner airlines — isn’t enough. Airlines should send multiple notifications as the departure date approaches, and they should require you to acknowledge them.\n\nAccording to the Department of Transportation, when a flight is significantly changed, and a passenger doesn’t accept the new itinerary, the airline must provide a refund. United rerouted you through Sydney on partner airlines without ensuring you actually had confirmed seats. That’s a massive breakdown in coordination between United and its partners.\n\nThe situation at Cairns Airport was absurd. You bought a United ticket. United should have been responsible for getting you home — not Qantas, not Virgin Australia. Instead, you got caught in a blame game between three airlines, with United pointing to Qantas, Qantas asking for information you didn’t have and Virgin Australia washing its hands of the situation.\n\nCould you have been more proactive in monitoring your reservation? Maybe. On a complicated itinerary like this, you’ll want to check your itinerary frequently in the weeks before departure. Sign up for text message alerts in addition to email notifications. Save screenshots of your original booking and any changes.\n\nYou could have escalated this to a United supervisor when the first agent couldn’t help. I publish executive contact information for United on my consumer advocacy site, [Elliott.org](https://www.elliott.org/). These contacts often have more authority to resolve complex issues than frontline agents.\n\nYou did an excellent job documenting your case with confirmation numbers, time stamps and the names of agents you spoke with. That paper trail is so important when you’re fighting for a refund.\n\nAfter my advocacy team got involved, United refunded the $600 copays — a start, but far from what you deserve. The airline still refuses to reimburse your Virgin Australia tickets. United maintains that because it had rebooked you on a Qantas flight you knew nothing about, the case is closed.\n\nThis is exactly the kind of runaround that drives travelers crazy. Airlines hide behind their contracts of carriage and partner agreements while passengers get stuck with the bill. You paid United for a complete journey. United didn’t deliver. I recommend you contact your credit card company to see if you can recover the rest of your expenses.\n\n*Christopher Elliott is the founder of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organization that helps consumers solve their problems. Email him at chris@elliott.org or get help by contacting him on his site, Elliott.org.*", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/united-changed-my-flight-but-never-told-me-now-im-out-2000", "canonical_source": "https://www.mercurynews.com/2026/06/15/a-travel-nightmare-united-changed-my-flight-but-never-told-me-now-im-out-2000/", "published_at": "2026-06-15 13:30:41+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-06-15 13:41:30.459789+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["ai-products"], "entities": ["United Airlines", "Virgin Australia", "Qantas", "Krupa Singampalli", "Department of Transportation", "Cairns Airport", "Sydney", "Auckland"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/united-changed-my-flight-but-never-told-me-now-im-out-2000", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/united-changed-my-flight-but-never-told-me-now-im-out-2000.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/united-changed-my-flight-but-never-told-me-now-im-out-2000.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/united-changed-my-flight-but-never-told-me-now-im-out-2000.jsonld"}}