DGCA suggests passengers planning to travel abroad to check rates on the airline website – News2IN
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DGCA suggests passengers planning to travel abroad to check rates on the airline website

DGCA suggests passengers planning to travel abroad to check rates on the airline website
Written by news2in

New Delhi: DGCA flight regulator on Tuesday advised passengers who planned to travel to international destinations to check the ticket price on the airline site related to the metasearch engine at that time did not reflect the tariff points to the point.
Various metasearch machining websites such as Google and Skyscanner operate in India.
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said on Twitter that Metracharch machines sometimes make a combination of several airlines – when passengers search for travel points to the point – and end up with excessive ticket figures.
Last Saturday, Sanjeev Gupta, Secretary, the Secretariat of the Council of the Council, the Ministry of Houses, had complained on Twitter that economic class tickets about Delhi-London British Airways flights for August 26 were priced at Rs 3.95 Lakh.
However, the Civil Service Ministry clarified on Sunday that economic class tickets about Delhi-London flights were available for between Rs 1.03 Lakh and Rs 1.47 lakh during August.
Even though there are lower and upper limits at all domestic prices in India since May 25 last year, there are no such limits worn by international airplane tickets.
DGCA said on Twitter on Tuesday: “Passengers traveling to international destinations Asked to check the preferred rates of the maskerasi site concerned because the metasearch engine sometimes does not reflect the point of point to the actual point and makes a combination of several airlines and ends with a figure Excessive.
“International passenger flights scheduled have been suspended in India since March 23 last year in the middle of the Coronavirus pandemic.
However, special international passenger flights have been operating since July 2020 under air bubble settings formed with 28 countries, including Britain.

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