Frontier Airlines, a low-cost budget carrier is celebrating Earth Week with 50% off base fares (excludes government taxes and carrier fees) on a wide array of flights through the summer travel period, flying on a Tuesday or Wednesday.
Frontier Airlines [flyfrontier.com]
Promotional Code:
FLYGREEN
Book by April 25, 2025
Travel Through August 18, 2025
Valid on Tuesday or Wednesday Flights Only
Blackout Dates: May 27 and July 2, 2025
Terms:
Tickets must be purchased by 11:59 pm Eastern time on Apr. 25, 2025. Discount applies to nonstop and connect, domestic and international travel. A 50% base fare discount applies to travel on Tuesday and Wednesday, through Aug. 18, 2025. The following blackout dates apply: May 27, 2025; Jul. 2, 2025. Discount does not apply to J, N, I, C, R, Y, B, and H class fares, which are our highest fares and may be the only fares available on certain dates or flights.
Round trip purchase is required. 7-day advance purchase is required. Route exclusions apply.
The promo code applies to BASE FARE ONLY, not to government taxes and fees or carrier-imposed fees and requires purchase at FlyFrontier.com using promo code FLYGREEN. Promo code must be applied directly by customer on flyfrontier.com or requested from a Frontier Airlines call center agent. Use of promo codes by third parties is expressly prohibited.
Image Credit: Frontier Airlines
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https://flyfrontier.com
7 Comments
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Why? Frontier is fantastic low cost airline. I think it beats spirit in low cost airlines
The flight out with Spirit had zero issues. Our gate changed, but they made sure to let everyone know. We took off about 10 minutes after the time listed for the doors to be closed, and landed 10 minutes before.
The flight back with Frontier was delayed by 1.5 hours due to a storm, and the gate changed twice without them letting anyone know. Loading everyone onto the plane took about an hour, which was significantly longer than Spirit, and that was partially due to the fact that there was a crowd stopping the "premium" passengers from loading up, and partially due to the fact that half the luggage space was zoned for "premium" passengers, then unloading took quite a while because everyone was scrambling to get their bags that were strewn about. The delays caused me to miss my flight, and due to Frontier's spotty routes, the next flight they offered me would put me home at a two day delay after flying me out to another city. I was offered a full refund for my full ticket, which I accepted, but later in the week they only gave me a partial partial refund, and I'm still fighting for a full one with them weeks later.
Ultimately, it's not Frontier's fault completely for the delay, and I'll most likely fly them again in the future if I'm taking a direct flight, but the time sink of multiple multiple hours to sort the situation out cost way more than the price to upgrade to a different airliner.
Flying Frontier, there are going to be delays because of the scant amount of space, the clients they typically get, and the lack of streamlining the loading and unloading process. If you're going somewhere where delays won't matter and the ticket is cheaper than whatever you value 1-3 hours of your time at, then it's worthwhile.
Again, I'll definitely fly Frontier at some point again because there's times when their ticket is $200-300 cheaper than any other flight to where I'm going. But if the savings isn't at least $100 or more, the chance of losing so many hours of my time or just the risk of not being able to get to my destination isn't worth. You have to assess time and risk value when buying from them, instead of just the price listed on the website.
The beach destination can be in the artic circle if they do this for a few more years.