In other, very, very rare instances, airlines have tried suing passengers who do hidden city ticketing and even companies that help people find hidden ticketing opportunities, such as skiplagged.com. In all of these instances, the court has dismissed the case. However, the person/company who’s being sued still has to pay legal fees for the trial, which is the only reason why airlines do this – it’s to scare other passengers into giving up (Ughh, I hope they don’t sue me for writing this). In most instances, they only go for people who do hidden city ticketing on a regular basis, costing the airlines upwards of 10 000$ – 100 000$ in lost fees.
https://www.cleverjourney.com/skipping-leg-of-flight/
In other, very, very rare instances, airlines have tried suing passengers who do hidden city ticketing and even companies that help people find hidden ticketing opportunities, such as skiplagged.com. In all of these instances, the court has dismissed the case. However, the person/company who’s being sued still has to pay legal fees for the trial, which is the only reason why airlines do this – it’s to scare other passengers into giving up (Ughh, I hope they don’t sue me for writing this). In most instances, they only go for people who do hidden city ticketing on a regular basis, costing the airlines upwards of 10 000$ – 100 000$ in lost fees.
skiplagged, you might end up on the airline's blacklist
其实这个就是航司的霸王条款。我买了用不用也要航司决定。