72-hour sale: Southwest fares fall below $100 round-trip

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Bargain hunters, get ready.

Southwest‘s big twice-a-year fare sale is back, with round-trip fares below $100 on dozens of the carrier’s shortest routes.

The sale fares also include longer routes, with the price of flights loosely tied to distance. Flights begin at $49 each way on Southwest’s shortest routes and increase to $79, $99 or $129 each way for longer flights.

The sale launched Tuesday morning and is good for travel from Nov. 28 through Dec. 19 and from Jan. 3 through Feb. 13.

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The sale covers a shorter window than last year’s version, when the booking window began Oct. 31.

However, other fine print mirrors restrictions from previous years of Southwest’s big sales. Flights on Fridays and Sundays are excluded. Schedules for Southwest’s Florida, Nevada and Puerto Rico flights have additional day-of-week restrictions, though the sale’s booking window for Puerto Rico extends through Feb. 28. Orange County flights also were excluded from the sale.

More fine print: The sale applies specifically to nonstop flights, though many connecting itineraries may also show lower-than-usual fares that mirror sale fares. Seats sold at the sale prices are capacity controlled, meaning the cheapest seats will likely sell out on individual flights as the sale progresses.

Some of Southwest’s international routes are also included in the sale, though those routes come with significant day-of-travel restrictions (Tuesdays and Wednesdays only). One-way fares to international destinations were listed for as low as $99, but most were higher and availability scattered. The travel window for international routes is from Nov. 28 through Dec. 12 and from Jan. 6 through March 12.

Regardless of the details, bargain seekers will have to act quickly to snag the fares. The sale ends on Thursday (Oct. 4) at 11:59 p.m. local time in the city of the departing flight. (Full sale details)

A Tuesday morning spot-check of fares showed fairly broad availability of the sale fares. The $49 fares do appear on most days on the advertised routes, though some routes show greater availability than others.

Southwest’s “Low Fare Calendar” offered a quick way for customers to find the sale fares on any particular route.

The broad fare sale has become a staple for Southwest. It has rolled out similar three-day sales each June and October for the past several years. One sale from June 2015 proved so popular that it crashed Southwest’s website, prompting the carrier to extend that particular sale by an additional 24 hours. Southwest’s website did not appear to be having any such issues during the current sale.

Southwest has used the sales to generate buzz and — perhaps more importantly — to sell seats during what are usually some of the slowest travel periods of the year.

In earlier versions of the sales, Southwest had pegged fares to mileage thresholds. Earlier this decade, for example, Southwest priced its sale fares at $49 each way for flights of 500 miles or less and prices increased from there. Flights of 501 to 1,000 miles cost $99 each way and flights of 1,001 to 1,500 miles cost $129 each way. Flights of more than 1,500 miles went for $149 each way.

Southwest ended the precise mileage component of its big sales a few years ago, but its big sales have continued to closely mimic its previous distance-based promotions. The carrier’s four advertised sale-fare tiers for this sale — $49, $79, $99 and $129 each way — are similar to the fares Southwest offered on its distance-based sales of years past.

Whatever the details, travelers can snag advertised round-trip fares for less than $100 on short routes.

Among the sub-$100 options with reasonable availability as of Tuesday morning were:

Albuquerque-Los Angeles; Amarillo-Dallas Love; Atlanta-Raleigh/Durham; Baltimore-Cincinnati; Austin-Houston Hobby; Boise-San Jose, California; Boston-Baltimore; Buffalo-Chicago Midway; Burbank, California-Sacramento; Charlotte-Nashville; Chicago Midway-Minneapolis/St. Paul; Cleveland-Atlanta; Columbus, Ohio-Washington Reagan National; Corpus Christi, Texas-Houston Hobby; Dallas Love-New Orleans; Des Moines-St. Louis; Detroit-Baltimore; El Paso-Phoenix; Fort Lauderdale-Jacksonville; Grand Rapids, Michigan-Chicago Midway; Indianapolis-Kansas City; Kansas City-Chicago Midway; Long Beach, California-Las Vegas; Los Angeles-El Paso; Los Angeles-San Francisco; Louisville-Baltimore; Memphis-Houston Hobby; Milwaukee-Kansas City; Oakland-San Diego; Pensacola, Florida-Nashville; Phoenix-Oakland; San Antonio-Dallas Love; Salt Lake City-Los Angeles; Rochester, New York-Baltimore; Richmond, Virginia-Atlanta; San Jose, California-Las Vegas; St. Louis-Oklahoma City; Tucson-Los Angeles; Tulsa-Houston Hobby; Washington Reagan National-Providence; and Wichita, Kansas-St. Louis, among others.

There were also some below-average fares on some of Southwest’s longer routes. Some that were showing availability early Tuesday included:

$79 one way: Washington National-Kansas City; Tucson-San Jose, California; Philadelphia-Tampa; Providence-Chicago Midway; Providence-Fort Lauderdale; Milwaukee-Houston Hobby; Philadelphia-Atlanta; Norfolk, Virginia-Orlando; Newark-Chicago Midway; New York LaGuardia-Chicago Midway; New York LaGuardia-Dallas Love Field; New Orleans-Washington National; Nashville-Denver; Nashville-Minneapolis/St. Paul; Baltimore-Minneapolis/St. Paul; Louisville-Houston Hobby; Indianapolis-Denver; Houston Hobby-Columbus, Ohio; Denver-Cincinnati.

$99 one way: San Francisco-Dallas Love; New Orleans-Los Angeles; Long Island/Islip, New York-West Palm Beach; Washington Dulles-Denver; St. Louis-Hartford, Connecticut; Pittsburgh-St. Louis; Kansas City-San Diego; Raleigh/Durham-Dallas Love; Portland, Oregon-Dallas Love; Newark-Austin; Indianapolis-Oakland; Houston Hobby-Washington National; Charlotte-Dallas Love.

$129 one way: Los Angeles-Tampa; Baltimore-San Juan, Puerto Rico; San Francisco-Chicago Midway; Raleigh/Durham-Denver; Pittsburgh-Los Angeles; Phoenix-Atlanta; Orlando-Sacramento; Boston-Denver.

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