Skiplagged Plays Whac-A-Mole With Southwest Flights

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Give flight discounter and hidden-city ticket enabler Skiplagged credit for its resourcefulness when it comes to offering verboten flights from Southwest Airlines, but the nine-year-old startup could be playing a dangerous game.

Skiplagged had been using Kiwi.com to access flights from Southwest, which notoriously touts Southwest.com as the only place for leisure travelers to book its tickets. But with a Southwest hometown federal court in Dallas barring Kiwi from scraping Southwest and settlement talks between the airline and Kiwi under way, Skiplagged is still earning money promoting Southwest flights.

Skiplagged now enables its customers to find Southwest flights on Skiplagged.com, and then points flyers to DestinaHolidays to book them. Does DestinaHolidays scrape the Southwest website to access the flights or grab them as part of tour packages? Both methods would presumably be unauthorized. Efforts to reach DestinaHolidays for comment were unsuccessful.

So Skiplagged, founded by Aktarer Zaman in New York, seems to be staying one step ahead of the airline, which has won multiple lawsuits and issued a torrent of cease and desist letters against startups and other online travel players seeking to offer Southwest flights on their own websites. Skiplagged didn’t respond to a request to comment about its strategy.

Asked whether Skiplagged is playing with fire when it comes to Southwest, one of the biggest carriers in the U.S., Kayak CEO Steve Hafner said: “They’ve been playing cat and mouse with airlines for years. Eventually, the cat gets the mouse.”

I can see both sides of the equation.

On the one hand, I admire little Skiplagged’s audacity in standing up to the airline. It hurts consumers that Southwest’s fares aren’t showing up for comparison or booking purposes in metasearch engines such as Kayak, Google Flights or Skyscanner.

On the other hand, Southwest flights from Skiplagged via DestinaHolidays are often more expensive than on Southwest.com. A Dallas Love Field Southwest flight to Chicago O’Hare on December 13 was $20 more on DestinaHolidays than it was on Southwest.com, for example.

In addition, the airline wants to market its flights in its own style, and the scrapers aren’t equipped or authorized to do so. In fact, they can’t even use a Southwest logo because that would be trademark infringement.

Southwest offers three brands of fares, lets consumers know that they can check “two bags for the price of none,” and provides information about how many Rapid Rewards points the flight will earn. All of that marketing sizzle is absent from the scraper websites.