All Nippon Airways Adjusts Fuel Surcharges (Award Implications)

All Nippon Airways Adjusts Fuel Surcharges (Award Implications)

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All Nippon Airways (ANA) has just considerably lowered fuel surcharges for bookings as of April 1, 2023, which is good news for passengers (especially those redeeming miles through programs that pass on these surcharges).

All Nippon Airways decreases fuel surcharges

Japanese Star Alliance carrier ANA updates its fuel surcharges periodically. I actually respect the way that ANA goes about it, as the airline ties its fuel surcharges to Singapore’s jet fuel price index, so the airline doesn’t just come up with these numbers out of nowhere.

The latest update has kicked in for bookings made as of April 1, 2023. These surcharges are still high, but they’re moving in the right direction. With this change, a flight from the United States to Japan will have $259 in fuel surcharges one-way, regardless of the cabin you’re traveling in (which is unusual, because most airlines have higher fuel surcharges in premium cabins).

ANA fuel surcharges as of April 1, 2023

As a point of comparison, ANA’s fuel surcharges topped out in October 2022, when the same flights had surcharges of $434. So we’ve seen around a 40% decrease since that high, which is a positive development.

ANA fuel surcharges as of October 1, 2022

Through early 2022, ANA had virtually no fuel surcharges, but we then saw a drastic increase, in light of oil prices. We saw increases on five separate occasions, so it’s at least nice that this trend is now reversing, and we’re seeing surcharges go down.

I respect the way ANA is going about this, and appreciate that the airline isn’t adding some additional surcharge for avoiding Russian airspace, since admittedly fuel consumption has increased significantly at the airline.

ANA has just lowered fuel surcharges, which is great

What are fuel surcharges, anyway?

For those of you not familiar with the concept of fuel surcharges, these are fees that airlines have been charging for years on tickets. They were introduced when oil prices were high many years ago as a temporary measure, but for most airlines have never been eliminated.

Obviously that’s very convenient on their part — airlines add fees when costs go up, but rarely eliminate them when costs go down. ANA at least deserves credit for historically not having terribly high fees, and adjusting them to reflect oil prices.

Fuel surcharges are incredibly frustrating for consumers

What are the implications of ANA decreasing surcharges?

With ANA decreasing fuel surcharges on most itineraries, what does that actually mean for consumers? Will tickets now be less expensive? Not necessarily.

For years, airlines in most regions have had to advertise “all-in” pricing, meaning the pricing you see from an airline includes all taxes, fees, and (fuel) surcharges. Therefore for revenue tickets, when an airline raises fuel surcharges, the base fare generally decreases proportionally (though with fees this high, it does essentially create a minimum fare you’ll be charged in various markets). Conversely, when an airline decreases fuel surcharges, the base fare generally increases proportionally.

For OMAAT readers the biggest implications are for award tickets, specifically with the programs that do pass on fuel surcharges to consumers:

  • This doesn’t impact ANA awards through Air Canada Aeroplan, Avianca LifeMiles, or United MileagePlus, since those programs don’t pass on fuel surcharges on these awards
  • This does impact ANA awards through All Nippon Airways Mileage Club and Virgin Atlantic Flying Club, since those programs do pass on fuel surcharges

The best way to book All Nippon Airways first & business class awards continues to be through Virgin Atlantic Flying Club (even after the recent devaluation), given the low award pricing:

  • Business class awards between the US mainland or Europe and Japan cost 45,000-47,500 points one-way
  • First class awards between the US mainland or Europe and Japan cost 72,500-85,000 points one-way

That doesn’t account for the fuel surcharges, which have at least just been lowered compared to their peak.

This is good news for those redeeming select miles

Bottom line

All Nippon Airways has significantly decreased fuel surcharges. In early 2022 the program had virtually no surcharges, and then we saw at least five increases, reflecting oil prices increasing. Fortunately as of April 1, 2023, fuel surcharges have been decreased by about 40% compared to several months ago, and hopefully that trend continues.

The biggest implication here is for those redeeming points, particularly through programs like All Nippon Airways Mileage Club and Virgin Atlantic Flying Club, which do pass on these fees.

What do you make of All Nippon Airways adjusting surcharges?

Conversations (13)
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  1. ana-should-i Guest

    I just ran a search for business class flight from LAX to ICN for two in business class for October, 2023. The surcharge total came out to be 215,560 in Yen. When converted to US Dollar, it is a whopping $1603, which basically is $800 per person. This shocking discovery does not reconcile with your charge matrix. I am just glad I did not transfer my AMX point to ANA first. Am I doing something wrong?

  2. ana-new-fan Guest

    hi

    is there any way to avoid such high YQ? maybe an ANA connection flight to a third place? like ORD-Tokyo two airports - PVG shanghai?

  3. Jan Guest

    If flights were already booked with the higher fuel costs, any strategy or chance of any type of refund?

    1. Aaron Guest

      Interested in knowing this too

  4. iamhere Guest

    I appreciate that they are pushing the savings due to gas prices starting to come down slightly on to the consumer. I disagree with the Russian airspace comment. If the airline needs to travel out of their way this should be pushed to the consumer rather than the airline incurs the cost. It is not the airline's problem they cannot use it.

  5. Vinay Guest

    Avoiding all Russian airspace at the expense of increased fuel consumption is the ultimate form of irrational virtue signaling. Makes sense to avoid Ukraine and surrounding airspace, but to avoid entire Russian airspace is totally illogical for many long haul flights. ME3 continues using it for US west coast flights. This doesn't hurt Russia in any manner and forces the airline to spend more and pollute more. Way to go!

    1. Dave Guest

      I don’t know if it’s “virtue signalling.” Perhaps airlines don’t want to risk losing their aircraft in increasingly-lawless Russia (whether that’s from being shot down MH17 style or from having planes forced to land so that Russian authorities can arrest a single passenger on the plane or whatever). Or perhaps airlines have internal consumer data showing most passengers prefer flights that don’t fly over Russia. Capitalism usually means we trust companies to make their own...

      I don’t know if it’s “virtue signalling.” Perhaps airlines don’t want to risk losing their aircraft in increasingly-lawless Russia (whether that’s from being shot down MH17 style or from having planes forced to land so that Russian authorities can arrest a single passenger on the plane or whatever). Or perhaps airlines have internal consumer data showing most passengers prefer flights that don’t fly over Russia. Capitalism usually means we trust companies to make their own decisions regarding how they operate - why don’t you trust airlines to decide for themselves which countries they’re willing to fly over?

  6. Jesper Guest

    JAL works the same way, they are required to do so by law in Japan. It might be a good point to introduce similar laws in other countries. Though I believe that BA has stopped calling it fuel surcharges, and just take the money anyway as surcharges.

  7. AwardAna Guest

    I booked an award flight in December. Is it possible to get some sort of credit now that this has changed?

  8. Ethan Guest

    Just booked an ANA ticket on Aeroplan due to fuel surcharge in the big picture, ugh!

  9. DenB Diamond

    Can we dispense with the notion that surcharges could conceivably have a rational connection to fuel costs? They have always been a cynical cash grab, nothing else. A 777 loads tons and tons of paying cargo and passengers for a flight. How much of the fuel is one passenger responsible for? If fuel price triples, now how much is one passenger responsible for? $25? $30? Please, can we just stop discussing these charges as if...

    Can we dispense with the notion that surcharges could conceivably have a rational connection to fuel costs? They have always been a cynical cash grab, nothing else. A 777 loads tons and tons of paying cargo and passengers for a flight. How much of the fuel is one passenger responsible for? If fuel price triples, now how much is one passenger responsible for? $25? $30? Please, can we just stop discussing these charges as if theoretically, hypothetically they could make sense? I call them ScamCharges and I wish thinking people would do the same. BTW no carrier refers to them as "fuel" surcharges any more.

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ DenB -- I hear you in general, but:
      a) ANA is one of the few airlines to at least actually link these surcharges to some sort of fuel index, so that's better than not doing that (like British Airways, which has $800 surcharges no matter what the price is)
      b) ANA *does* refer to these as fuel surcharges, see here: https://www.ana.co.jp/en/us/plan-book/fare-rules/

    2. Eskimo Guest

      Can we dispense with the notion that tips and gratuities could conceivably have a rational connection to service? They have always been a cynical cash grab, nothing else.

      Like many other broken system the public allows it to go on, we just have to suck it up.

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Aaron Guest

Interested in knowing this too

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ana-should-i Guest

I just ran a search for business class flight from LAX to ICN for two in business class for October, 2023. The surcharge total came out to be 215,560 in Yen. When converted to US Dollar, it is a whopping $1603, which basically is $800 per person. This shocking discovery does not reconcile with your charge matrix. I am just glad I did not transfer my AMX point to ANA first. Am I doing something wrong?

0
ana-new-fan Guest

hi is there any way to avoid such high YQ? maybe an ANA connection flight to a third place? like ORD-Tokyo two airports - PVG shanghai?

0
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