I purchased a ticket from Boston to Madrid on Iberia Airlines through its website, but I didn’t receive a confirmation. When I called Iberia, an agent told me that he couldn’t see the purchase and advised me to dispute the charge with my credit card company, which I did a week later. On the same day, I received an email from Iberia with a confirmation.
I called my bank that day and withdrew the dispute. A bank representative told me to just ignore any written communication and that it would automatically close the dispute. I followed this advice and assumed that my ticket would be valid.
It wasn’t. When I tried to check in for my flight, the system showed my ticket as “suspended.” An Iberia representative told me to dispute the charge again and buy a new ticket, so I followed this advice.
Iberia did, in fact, receive the $776 from my bank (Capital One), but it nonetheless suspended my ticket. I would like to get a refund. Can you help me? You should have had a ticket on your flight from Boston to Madrid.
The problem is obvious: An Iberia representative told you to dispute the charge — and later “undispute” it –without making the necessary notations on Iberia’s side. As a result, you ended up with a voided ticket. You shouldn’t have disputed this charge in the first place.
True, credit card chargebacks under the Fair Credit Billing Act cover products and services that were purchased but not received. However, you hadn’t given Iberia time to resolve this.
