Which is exactly what I was talking about! A YUP fare is booked in A or P class not Y. Alireza Alivandivafa wrote: > In the US, full fare coach is almost always listed as Y class. This is definately true of United. A class is often times a discounted First fare. > > > -----Original Message----- > From: markgerrard@xxxxxxxxxxx > To: AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Tue, 5 Sep 2006 5:31 PM > Subject: Re: anyone hear about this fare class Y-UP? > > > This is incorrect. > > YUP fares are usually booked in either A or P class. If you do a search > on any of the major travel booking engines for a business class fare, it > will be the lowest fare available, which will usually be anywhere from > $700 to $1200 depending on destination. CO are I think the only major > carrier that do not do YUP fares, they just have straight Z fares which > are a discounted business class. > > Michael C. Berch wrote: > >> On most (major) airlines it's simply the unadorned Y fare, but you >> have to check with the airline to make sure it applies to your >> specific flight. "Y-UP" is not in common use; what usually happens is >> that you book in Y, and through the reservations desk or the web site >> you get a seat assignment in F. Then when you check in, you get a >> real F boarding pass (which is often a different color or style, and >> gets perks like a lounge, early boarding, etc.). Sometimes the >> boarding pass is coded with a class like NF, FN, ZF, FZ, or F2. >> Depends by airline. >> >> >> > ________________________________________________________________________ > Check out the new AOL. Most comprehensive set of free safety and security tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web, free AOL Mail and more. > >