British Airways slumps to near bottom in passenger survey

British Airways has taken a nosedive in UK
passengers’ opinions and is now rated just above Ryanair at the bottom end of
the airline rankings.
The flag carrier was among the worst rated for food,
seat comfort and value for money on both short and long-haul services in the
annual Which? poll.
BA questioned the accuracy of the survey, which is
based on 6,500 readers’ opinions rather than comprehensive data, and found the
best short-haul airline to be Aurigny Air, a small Channel Islands turboprop
operator.
However, the results will make for further unwelcome
reading for BA, the formerly self-proclaimed “world’s favourite airline”, which
celebrated a centenary this year.
In the short-haul table, BA only beat Vueling, which
is also part of International Airlines Group, and Ryanair, which once again
came last.
On long haul, only American Airlines – BA’s
code-share partner on transatlantic routes – fared worse.
BA topped the short-haul category in the Which?
survey in 2015, but has since downgraded its onboard food offering. Meanwhile,
IT failures and power outages that resulted in mass cancellations, as well as
data breaches and the recently resolved pilots’ dispute, have battered its
reputation.
A BA spokesman said: “Our own data shows customer
satisfaction scores have increased, and continue to increase, as we deliver our
£6.5bn investment for customers on new aircraft, new food, new lounges and new
technology.
“We offer our
customers a choice of cabins on all our flights, lounges for business class
customers, free food for all long-haul flights and business class for short
haul, and we are delighted to be able to offer our customers the most extensive
network by any UK airline.”
Ryanair did not respond to requests for comment but
has previously described the survey as “totally unrepresentative and
worthless”. Passengers rated the airline rock bottom in all categories, apart
from value for money.
On American Airlines, Which? said responses were
summed up by one passenger’s assessment: “The cabin was scruffy, the staff
rude, the food awful.”
Short-haul passengers praised Jet2, especially for
customer service, while easyJet also scored well. Singapore Airlines won in the
long-haul category. Which? said the results of its survey showed passengers
with a choice should opt for Jet2 on short-haul routes and Virgin Atlantic for
transatlantic flights.