Holding a Ticket on Spirit Airlines? Start Here.

 

If you’re supposed to be traveling with Spirit Airlines, there are 9 things you can do right now to ensure a smooth journey.

Spirit Airlines shutting down is the kind of travel news that hits fast — and for a lot of people, very personally.

For travelers, this means canceled flights, missed connections, disrupted vacations, hotel nights, weddings, work trips, cruises, and a whole lot of “what do I do now?” For Spirit employees, it means thousands of pilots, flight attendants, gate agents, mechanics, dispatchers, and corporate teams waking up to truly devastating news.

But if you’re one of the passengers holding a Spirit ticket, this is not the time to wait and see what happens. You need to move quickly.

1. Don’t just show up at the airport

Heading to the airport without a confirmed backup plan is probably only going to add more stress. Wherever you may be, take a deep breath and start from your phone or laptop. Pull up your reservation, check your credit card, and start looking at replacement flights right away.

2. Book a “rescue fare” before fares jump

This is the painful part, but it matters: if you still need to travel, don’t wait.

When an airline suddenly stops flying, thousands of people start searching the same routes at the same time. That can send prices climbing fast, especially to places like Florida, Las Vegas, the Caribbean, and major cruise departure cities.

The other major carriers in the United States have agreed to ‘cap’ their rates and offer a ‘rescue fare’ to anyone holding a Spirit Airlines ticket. These fares are limited to only those passengers holding a ticket on Spirit Airlines and they’re only valid for a few weeks to help everyone complete their trip.

3. Contact your credit card company

Since Spirit is no longer operating and your flight is canceled, you paid for a service you did not receive.

Contact the credit card company you used to buy the ticket and open a dispute or chargeback for “services not provided.” Upload your confirmation, cancellation notice, screenshots, emails, and anything else showing the flight is no longer operating.

Do this sooner rather than later. In a bankruptcy or liquidation situation, waiting for the normal airline refund process may not be the fastest—or most realistic—path.

It’s true that if you’ve purchased a ticket and haven’t yet completed your trip, your airfare payment is being held in an escrow account, but it could take months before those funds are released.

If you used a debit card, call your bank anyway. The protections may be different, but it is still worth starting the process immediately.

Only do this if you bought your ticket directly with Spirit Airlines. If you purchased through another website such as Expedia, Hopper, and the like a chargeback won’t work. Those websites need to receive your refund before they can refund you.

4. Save every single receipt

Don’t assume anyone is going to automatically reimburse you.

Save receipts for replacement airfare, hotels, meals, transportation, rental cars, parking, baggage fees, and anything else you had to pay because of this disruption.

Will you get every dollar back? Maybe, maybe not. But you definitely won’t if you can’t document it.

This is especially important if you bought travel insurance or used a credit card with trip protection benefits.

5. Check your travel insurance and card benefits

If you bought travel protection, call the insurance company and ask specifically about airline insolvency, bankruptcy, common carrier failure, trip delay, or trip interruption.

Don’t guess. Every policy is different.

Also, check the credit card you used to buy the ticket. Some cards include trip delay, cancellation, or interruption coverage, but the rules are usually very specific. You may need written proof of the cancellation and receipts for every added expense.

6. If you’re going on a cruise, call immediately

This is where timing really matters.

If your Spirit flight was getting you to a cruise, tour, or package vacation, call your travel advisor, cruise line, or tour operator right away. Do not assume they know you’re impacted.

For cruises, especially, the ship is not going to wait because an airline shut down. You may need to look at alternate airports, fly in a day early if that’s still possible, or in some cases ask whether meeting the ship at the next port is even an option.

And this is exactly why I always tell people to fly in at least one day before a cruise. It’s not about adding a hotel night for fun. It’s because travel disruptions happen, and when they do, that extra day can save your entire vacation.

7. If you booked through a third party, contact them too

If you booked Spirit through Expedia, Priceline, Booking.com, Hopper, a cruise line air department, or another platform, contact them as well.

They may not be able to magically fix everything, but they need to be part of the paper trail. Ask them to document that the operating airline ceased service and that your flight was canceled.

8. Watch out for scams

Any time travelers are stressed and scrambling, scammers show up.

Only book directly with airlines, reputable travel agencies, or well-known booking platforms. Be very cautious with random social media posts claiming to offer Spirit refunds, rescue fares, or special compensation forms.

And please, don’t give your credit card information to anyone who contacts you out of the blue.

9. Take a breath — then move fast

This is frustrating. For some travelers, it is also going to be expensive. But the best thing you can do now is act in the right order:

First, secure replacement travel if the trip still matters.
Second, start your refund or chargeback.
Third, document everything.
Fourth, check insurance and credit card benefits.
Fifth, keep watching for official rescue fare announcements.

Spirit changed the airline industry. Love them or hate them, their ultra-low-cost model forced bigger airlines to compete on price and gave a lot of people access to flights they may not have otherwise been able to afford.

Their shutdown is more than just an inconvenience for today’s travelers. It could also mean fewer cheap seats in the market going forward.

But right now, the priority is simple: if you have a Spirit ticket, don’t wait for someone to call you. Get proactive, get rebooked, and get your refund claim started today.

Bobby Laurie

Bobby Laurie is a nationally recognized travel expert, advisor, former flight attendant, and co-host of the travel television show The Jet Set, where he has spent more than a decade helping viewers navigate the ever-changing world of travel. With firsthand airline experience and years of on-air reporting, Bobby brings practical, real-world insight to everything from air travel and cruising to travel trends, consumer advice, and vacation planning.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

We Said Go Travel