Jump to content

JetBlue Travel Credits are Anti-Consumer

From Consumer Rights Wiki

Article Status Notice: This Article is a stub


This article is underdeveloped, and needs additional work to meet the wiki's Content Guidelines and be in line with our Mission Statement for comprehensive coverage of consumer protection issues. Learn more ▼

⚠️ Article status notice: This article has been marked as incomplete

This article needs additional work for its sourcing and verifiability to meet the wiki's Content Guidelines and be in line with our Mission Statement for comprehensive coverage of consumer protection issues. In particular:

  1. No neutral point of view.

This notice will be removed once the issue/s highlighted above have been addressed and sufficient documentation has been added to establish the systemic nature of these issues. Once you believe the article is ready to have its notice removed, please visit the Moderator's noticeboard, or the discord and post to the #appeals channel.

Learn more ▼

JetBlue's travel credits are anti-consumer due to their restrictive and devaluing nature compared to a cash refund. These limitations lock customers into future business with the airline, effectively removing their purchasing power while allowing JetBlue to hold onto cash for services it did not provide.

Background[edit | edit source]

When refunding a ticket, JetBlue does not refund with the same currency that was used to purchase the ticket[1]. Instead, JetBlue issues a travel credit which limits what a person can spend their refunded money on keeping it within the JetBlue ecosystem[2]. By issuing travel credits instead of cash refunds, JetBlue coerces future business from customers who may have preferred to take their money to a different airline or travel another way.

Rather than being a true refund, the credit functions as an interest-free loan from the customer to JetBlue or a "donation" with strings attached. This is particularly nefarious as JetBlue's travel credits expire if not spent in a set time period. The gift-card nature of the credit incentivizes an awkward balancing act: either spend more than the credit's value to make up the difference with cash, or risk "breakage" - the industry term for when a customer fails to use the entire value before its expiration date[3]. This encourages overspending to avoid wasting a small balance or, conversely, leaves customers with a nearly-spent balance that is too small to book a new flight and ultimately expires. This dynamic turns the unused portion of a customer's payment into pure, unearned revenue for JetBlue, a practice that shifts all the risk onto the consumer while the airline holds onto cash for services it never rendered.

[Incident][edit | edit source]

Change this section's title to be descriptive of the incident.

Impartial and complete description of the events, including actions taken by the company, and the timeline of the incident coming to the public's attention.


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.


[Company]'s response[edit | edit source]

If applicable, add the proposed solution to the issues by the company.


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.



Lawsuit[edit | edit source]

If applicable, add any information regarding litigation around the incident here.

Claims

Main claims of the suit.

Rebuttal

The response of the company or counterclaims.

Outcome

The outcome of the suit, if any.


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.



Consumer response[edit | edit source]

Summary and key issues of prevailing sentiment from the consumers and commentators that can be documented via articles, emails to support, reviews and forum posts.


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.


References[edit | edit source]

  1. "Refunds | JetBlue". JetBlue. 2025-08-31. Archived from the original on 2025-09-01. Retrieved 2025-08-31.
  2. "Travel Bank Credits | JetBlue". JetBlue. 2025-08-31. Archived from the original on 2025-09-01. Retrieved 2025-08-31.
  3. Toni, Perkins-Southam (2024-12-19). "What Is Breakage And Why Does It Matter?". Forbes. Retrieved 2025-08-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)