Flight Policies
Flight policies control cabin access, seat attributes, and booking requirements for air travel. These settings help travelers book appropriate flights while maintaining cost control and compliance.
Cabin Requirements
Configure approval and blocking rules for each cabin class. Each cabin (Economy, Premium Economy, Business, First Class) can have different requirements based on your organization’s travel standards.
Approval Requirements
Determine when travelers need approval before booking specific cabin classes:
Always
Always requires approval regardless of cost or circumstances. Use for cabin classes that need explicit permission.
Best for:
- Business class for standard employees
- First class for all travelers
- Strict cost control policies
Never
Never requires approval—travelers can book freely. This provides maximum flexibility for approved cabin classes.
Best for:
- Economy class for all travelers
- Premium Economy for executives
- Pre-approved cabin upgrades
Above Threshold
Requires approval when flight cost exceeds a specific dollar amount. This balances flexibility with cost control.
Configuration:
- Threshold Amount - Dollar limit for automatic approval
- Currency - USD, EUR, etc.
Best for:
- Premium Economy with cost limits
- Business class for long-haul flights only
- Executive travel with budget constraints
Above LLF (Lowest Logical Fare)
Requires approval when flight cost exceeds the Lowest Logical Fare by a specified amount or percentage. This ensures cost-effective booking while allowing flexibility.
Configuration:
- LLF Threshold - Dollar amount or percentage above LLF
- LLF Definition - Reference to your organization’s LLF rules
Best for:
- Premium cabins when cost-justified
- Flexible booking with cost accountability
- Market-rate based approvals
With Conditions
Conditional approval based on custom field values (e.g., executive level, travel distance, trip purpose).
Configuration:
- Conditions - Custom field logic for approval requirements
- Field Examples - Role, department, travel duration, destination
Best for:
- Role-based cabin access
- International vs. domestic rules
- Event-specific accommodations
Block Requirements
Determine when specific cabin classes are unavailable to travelers:
Always
Always blocked - travelers cannot book this cabin class under any circumstances.
Best for:
- First class restrictions
- Cost control enforcement
- Policy compliance
Never
Never blocked - cabin class is always available (subject to approval requirements).
Best for:
- Approved cabin classes
- Executive travel flexibility
- Emergency booking situations
Above Threshold
Blocked when flight cost exceeds a specific dollar amount. Higher costs require alternatives.
Above LLF
Blocked when flight cost exceeds the Lowest Logical Fare by specified thresholds.
With Conditions
Conditionally blocked based on custom field logic.
Blocking requirements override approval requirements. If a cabin is blocked, travelers cannot book it even with approval. Use blocking carefully to avoid stranding travelers without options.
Seat Attributes
Control flight features and set traveler preferences for booking options.
Refundable Tickets
Allowed Options:
- Yes - Refundable tickets available
- No - Nonrefundable tickets only
Preferred Setting:
- Yes - Prioritize refundable options
- No - Prioritize nonrefundable options
Use Cases:
- Flexible schedules benefit from refundable tickets
- Cost-conscious policies prefer nonrefundable
- Executive travel needs maximum flexibility
Changeable Tickets
Allowed Options:
- Free - Free change tickets available
- Paid - Paid change tickets allowed
- Not Allowed - No changeable tickets
Preferred Setting:
- Free - Prioritize free change options
- Paid - Accept paid changes when necessary
- Not Allowed - Avoid changeable tickets
Use Cases:
- Uncertain schedules benefit from free changes
- Budget policies limit change flexibility
- Fixed schedules don’t require changes
Carry-on Bag
Allowed Options:
- Yes - Carry-on bags included/available
- No - No carry-on bags
Preferred Setting:
- Yes - Include carry-on bags
- No - Skip carry-on bags
Use Cases:
- Short trips may not require carry-on
- Business travel typically needs carry-on
- Ultra-low-cost carrier policies
Checked Bags
Allowed Options:
- 0 - No checked bags
- 1 - One checked bag
- 2 - Two checked bags
Preferred Setting:
- 0, 1, or 2 - Preferred number of checked bags
Use Cases:
- Short trips: 0 bags
- Standard business travel: 1 bag
- Extended travel: 2 bags
- Equipment transportation needs
Seat Selection
Allowed Options:
- Included - Seat selection included in fare
- Paid - Paid seat selection available
- Not Available - Random seat assignment
Preferred Setting:
- Included - Prefer included seat selection
- Paid - Accept paid seat selection
- Not Available - Accept random assignment
Use Cases:
- Premium fares include seat selection
- Budget policies use random assignment
- Accessibility needs require specific seats
Boarding Priority
Allowed Options:
- Standard - Standard boarding process
- Priority - Priority/early boarding
Preferred Setting:
- Standard - Standard boarding preference
- Priority - Priority boarding preference
Use Cases:
- Executive travel benefits from priority boarding
- Carry-on restrictions may require early boarding
- Cost control policies use standard boarding
Preferred settings guide the booking engine to show travelers the most suitable options first, while allowed options define the full range of acceptable choices if preferred options aren’t available.
Flight Search Options
Control advanced flight search capabilities that affect how the booking engine searches for and displays flight options to travelers.
Split-Ticket Search
Split-ticket search allows the booking engine to combine one-way tickets from different airlines into a single itinerary. When enabled, travelers can see additional flight options that combine one-way tickets from different airlines. This can unlock more itinerary choices at lower initial prices. However, these may lead to higher change fees and additional unused tickets if plans change.
Configuration:
- Enabled - Travelers see additional flight options combining one-way tickets from different airlines
- Disabled - Only round-trip or same-airline itineraries shown
How It Works:
When enabled, the flight search engine will:
- Search for one-way flights independently for outbound and return segments
- Identify combinations from different airlines that create viable itineraries
- Display these split-ticket options alongside traditional round-trip fares
- Clearly indicate when an itinerary uses tickets from multiple airlines
Use Cases:
Enable split-ticket search when:
- Cost savings are a priority over simplicity
- Your organization values having more itinerary choices
- Travelers are comfortable managing tickets from different airlines
- You want to access ultra-low-cost carriers for one leg while using major carriers for another
Disable split-ticket search when:
- Simplicity and ease of management are priorities
- You prefer single-airline itineraries for easier rebooking during disruptions
- Travelers prefer unified airline experiences (lounges, loyalty programs, baggage policies)
- Your travel policy requires same-airline bookings
Considerations:
Split-ticket itineraries may have different baggage policies, rebooking rules, and disruption handling procedures for each airline. Travelers should review these details carefully before booking.
Best Practices:
- Set Clear Expectations - Educate travelers about split-ticket itinerary implications
- Review Policies - Ensure your disruption policy accounts for multi-airline itineraries
- Monitor Feedback - Track traveler satisfaction with split-ticket bookings
- Consider Routes - Some routes benefit more from split-ticketing than others
Configuration Examples
Standard Employee Policy
Cabin Requirements:
- Economy: Never require approval, never blocked
- Premium Economy: Always require approval, never blocked
- Business: Always require approval, above $1000 threshold blocked
- First: Always require approval, always blocked
Seat Attributes:
- Refundable: No preferred, Yes/No allowed
- Changeable: Paid preferred, Free/Paid allowed
- Carry-on: Yes preferred, Yes allowed
- Checked Bags: 1 preferred, 0/1 allowed
- Seat Selection: Not Available preferred, all allowed
- Boarding: Standard preferred, Standard allowed
Flight Search Options:
- Split-Ticket Search: Enabled (to maximize cost savings)
Executive Policy
Cabin Requirements:
- Economy: Never require approval, never blocked
- Premium Economy: Never require approval, never blocked
- Business: Above LLF +$500 require approval, never blocked
- First: Always require approval, above LLF +$2000 blocked
Seat Attributes:
- Refundable: Yes preferred, Yes/No allowed
- Changeable: Free preferred, all allowed
- Carry-on: Yes preferred, Yes allowed
- Checked Bags: 2 preferred, 1/2 allowed
- Seat Selection: Included preferred, all allowed
- Boarding: Priority preferred, all allowed
Flight Search Options:
- Split-Ticket Search: Disabled (prefer single-airline experience)
International Travel Policy
Cabin Requirements:
- Economy: Never require approval, never blocked
- Premium Economy: Never require approval, never blocked
- Business: With Conditions (flight >8 hours), above $3000 blocked
- First: Always require approval, always blocked
Seat Attributes:
- Refundable: Yes preferred, Yes/No allowed
- Changeable: Free preferred, all allowed
- Carry-on: Yes preferred, Yes allowed
- Checked Bags: 2 preferred, 1/2 allowed
- Seat Selection: Included preferred, all allowed
- Boarding: Priority preferred, all allowed
Flight Search Options:
- Split-Ticket Search: Enabled (to maximize route options for international travel)
Sharing Approval Details
Approvers can share flight approval request details via email with external stakeholders who need visibility into approval decisions. This feature is useful for:
- Consulting with executives or travel managers before approving premium cabin upgrades
- Coordinating with budget owners on high-cost flight bookings
- Sharing flight policy violations with finance or compliance teams
- Getting input from department heads on travel decisions
When sharing a flight approval request:
- Navigate to the flight approval that needs review
- Click the Share button
- Enter the recipient’s email address
- Optionally add a message providing context about the approval request
- The recipient receives an email with complete flight details including itinerary, cabin class, pricing, and any policy violations
The shared email displays all relevant approval information but does not include action buttons, as only designated approvers can approve or reject requests within the Juno platform.
Best Practices
Cabin Configuration
- Start Conservative - Begin with restrictive policies and loosen as needed
- Use Thresholds Wisely - Set realistic dollar amounts based on route analysis
- Consider Route Length - Different rules for domestic vs. international flights
- Monitor Compliance - Track approval rates and policy violations
Seat Attributes
- Align with Expense Policy - Ensure travel and expense policies are consistent
- Consider Traveler Needs - Balance cost control with traveler experience
- Test Booking Flows - Verify policies work as expected in booking scenarios
- Regular Review - Update preferences based on airline product changes
Policy Testing
- Use Test Bookings - Validate policy behavior before deployment
- Check Edge Cases - Test unusual routes and scenarios
- Verify Integrations - Ensure policies work with expense management
- Monitor Feedback - Collect traveler feedback on policy effectiveness
Flight policies integrate with Lowest Logical Fare (LLF) definitions to provide market-based cost control. Configure your LLF rules before setting up threshold-based cabin requirements.
Related Features
- Lowest Logical Fares - Market-based cost control thresholds
- Custom Fields - Create fields for conditional flight policies
- Policy Selection Rules - Assign different flight policies by traveler type
- Expense Policies - Align post-travel expense rules with booking policies