Whoosh........
I think you need to read a bit more on how airline fares are calculated.
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It seems to be more expensive to buy using euro i was on Play.com and when the price was in sterling i worked it out using xe.com as costing 40 euro but when you click for the site to calculate it, it was 46 euro dont know if they factor in postage but for a site that offers free postage it would be poor form.
As Maribor has intimated airlines uses complex predictive models with fairly meaty algorithims to set fares.
Thats why fares may go up and down many times in the days and months before a flight.
Nothing to do with the exchange rate, generally this is one area where airlines are fairly fair.
It is reasonably easy to predict what price fares will increase to although not 100% accurate. On Ryanair for example pick 2 tickets for random destination for next week, then try say 6 tickets & keep increasing ticket quantity. You will see the price per ticket increase in increments based on how many seats remaining. The more seats sold the more expensive the remaining seats as airlines know someone booking at short notice (e.g. business) are less price sensitive.
Ryanairs model is fairly simple & include more rules rather than behavioural or predictive factors. They also only do point to point bookings which keeps it simple.
Other airlines release seats into fare buckets on a regular basis and hence there are regular price fluctuations.
You can't just pluck the rate off XE currency converter at any given time and expect things to match it. If you go into a bank it will use a midmarket rate from yesterday's activity to give you a stable rate for today, so if you look at XE it will be giving you today's market rate up to date by the minute.
Well i was booking flights today on the aerlingus website and there was over 40 euro in the difference on the same flight at the same time depending on if i was paying euro or dollars. I checked the irish site got the price , opened a new window checked it on the american one spotted the difference even put it back into the irish one again to see if the price had dropped and it was still more expensive. so i think you have some thing there
NEXT is terrible,translating sterling into euro and rounding up a good bit
Bought a small item up north today in Dunnes that cost £10...the euro price on the tag was €20 when the current conversion rate makes it €12.63.
If you live anywhere near the north at all, it's well worth making the trip because it's a complete joke down here.
Think of it this way - a flight from Dublin to Manchester on the morning when ManU are playing a home game is going to cost more than the same flight that afternoon. Likewise the flight from Manchester to Dublin late that evening is going to cost more than the same flight that morning.
So Dub - Man am and Man - Dub pm = expensive
whereas Man - Dub am and Dub - Man pm = cheap
Yeah but Man Utd weren't playing? :confused:
;):D
The moral of the story really is this - Ireland is currently a ****hole - overpriced , lousy Government, Recession hit and greedy - Get out now
I love Hyperbole but theres a grain of truth there too
But believe it or not it is getting better (due mostly to the EU).
When I was younger I can remember customs agents searching every car crossing the border for people bringing normal household goods and even shopping south. You had to either pay the duty or get it confiscated!
The only way prices will reduce is through competition, ie people going to the North or wherever and forcing prices in Ireland downwards.
When booking flights for say 6 people.
- check price for 6
- then check price for 3
it is usually cheaper if you book for 3 people twice than if you book for 6.
Done it before and worked out at about 20eur cheaper per ticket.
Just came across another classic rip off this week , have to buy specialist lactose free baby milk powder which costs about e6.39 in local chemist , the same stuff is 7.50 in Tesco and by co-incidence 7.50 in Dunnes as well, I would of expected the supermarket to be a lot cheaper than the chemists as they carry more stock but was shocked when they were both charging the same inflated price.
I think one of the papers is carrying a report about the same issue this morning. Haven't had time to look on line, but assume it's Tesco and Dunnes charging the same prices. As I mentioned on another thread, for all the hype all Tesco have done is price match Lidl in their supposed cuts - they won't even go the whole hog of a price war.
I think it is on the front of the Daily I should I say Irish Mail.
Good article in the price watch section of the Irish Times last week about the Tesco v Lidl/Aldi price war. I think Lidl were calling Tesco yellow packs trash watchers. Lidl seemed to be targeting Tesco saying their products were as cheap as theirs but inferior quality. Used example of processed cheese slices which had 19% cheese - begs the question what the other 81% is. :eek:
Yeah, Tesco have price matched Lidl, but now Lidl are running adds comparing the quality. The one I saw was Sausage Rolls - Lidl were a bigger pack, and with far higher pork content. A lot of the tesco yellow (and black) pack stuff is Tesco Value, and in fairness to Lidl their stuff was always way better than that.
From talking to people, it seems many are shopping around. Loads more in lidl and Aldi (I prefer aldi myself) but still prefer dunnes and tesco for stuff like meat, dairy products. Most don't mind spending a bit on the odd brand name either