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Open-jaw ticket

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A sample itinerary for an open jaw electronic ticket from Montreal to Amsterdam, and returning from Munich

An open-jaw ticket is an airline return ticket where the destination and/or the origin are not the same in both directions. The name is derived from how it looks when drawn on a map.[citation needed]

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Transcription

("Pluck and Blow") - [Voiceover] For frequent fliers out there, you might wanna listen up. Studies suggest that frequent fliers, like pilots, have more than double the risk of developing melanoma compared to the general population. Plane windows do not sufficiently block the harmful UV rays, which are more powerful at higher altitudes. About a third of your taste buds go numb during flight. The dry air evaporates nasal mucus, and membranes become swollen from cabin pressurization, making it more difficult to detect food scents needed for taste. At cruising altitudes your blood absorbs less oxygen, which may cause sleepiness, dizziness, fatigue, and a lack of mental sharpness. The decreased air pressure on the plane also causes gas to expand in your body, which can lead to discomfort. Sitting for a very long time decreases blood flow and causes blood to pool in your lower extremities. This causes your muscles to stiffen, and increases the risk of blood clots. Pick your legs up and walk around a bit. There's a risk of altitude induced decompression sickness in flight. One symptom is joint pain, or the bends. If you've gone scuba diving your risk is increased, and you should wait at least 24 hours after a dive to take a flight. Crossing two or more time zones can give you jet lag, as it takes your brain longer to catch onto the new pattern of day and night. The effects are less prominent when flying east to west because you're gaining day light. You're exposed to cosmic radiation at higher altitudes. Some studies suggest that frequent fliers, like pilots or flight attendants, have a higher risk of getting cancer due to radiation. But don't worry, you're probably more likely to get into a plane crash than cancer from that radiation. ("Pluck and Blow")

Types

There are three types:

  • Destination open-jaw, where a passenger flies from one city to another, but returns to the original city from a different place. For example, depart London to New York, but on the return trip fly from Philadelphia to London.
  • Origin open-jaw, where the passenger leaves from one city to another but returns to a different place. For example, flying from London to New York, but returning from New York to Manchester.
  • Double open-jaw, where two totally separate fares exist. For example, flying from London to New York, but on the return trip flying from Boston to Manchester.

Using different airports in the same city is not considered an open-jaw, so a passenger on a London to JFK trip who returned from Newark would still be a simple round trip as both airports are considered to be serving metropolitan New York City.

ARNK

The open gaps between the cities show on the itinerary as ARNK, the same code that shows on an airline or agency's Global Distribution System. The term (pronounced arunk) means "arrival unknown".

The reason for this is that airline reservation systems (and major GDSs) require the segments following on sequentially, so arriving at one city, and then departing from another, will cause the system to return an error message. The ARNK field tells the system that this is intentional, and also allows for the ticketing system to blank the unused coupons of a ticket.

A typical destination open-jaw would look like this on an itinerary, with the ARNK on the second segment to show that it is not being flown on that ticket.

  • Segment 1: 11-NOV: SFO/IAD (San Francisco to Washington-Dulles)
  • Segment 2: ARNK:   Arrival Unknown or Surface Transportation from IAD to PHL
  • Segment 3: 15-NOV: PHL/SFO (Philadelphia to San Francisco)

Reasons for using open-jaw tickets

In some cases, this type of arrangement is needed for boat cruises that do not return to the departure city. In other cases, the traveller wishes to explore between two points and using alternative transport (e.g. buses, trains, ferries or flights on another ticket). For example, a traveller might fly from London to Bangkok, travel around Thailand by public transport and fly back home to London from Phuket.[1] Another example would be a traveller flying from New York City to London, travelling around different countries in Europe by taking buses / trains or low-cost carrier flights, then returning from Vilnius. Open-jaw tickets are a flexible and relatively inexpensive way of flying as they are priced as a round-trip ticket, in most cases less expensive than purchasing two one-way flights between the destinations visited.

Another market commonly traveled under an open-jaw itinerary is the one of local one-way tours. Take, for example, a tour of Florida, where a traveler flying into Jacksonville, Orlando, or Miami rents a car or joins a bus tour at their arrival airport, and returns the car or ends the tour in the town from which they will be flying home.

Restrictions

Some routing restrictions can apply to open-jaw tickets. The most common restriction is that the open-jaw segments must be shorter than the flown segments. In some circumstances, the destination and return origin must be in the same IATA region, or may be restricted to the same country.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Getting to Thailand | How to travel to Thailand". Rough Guides. Retrieved 2023-03-01.
This page was last edited on 6 June 2024, at 20:47
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