Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
A spelling mistake on a flight ticket should cost you nothing or very little, yet travellers regularly pay Rs 2,000 to Rs 3,500 because they asked the wrong party or asked too late. Here is what name corrections typically cost in India, before the dispute steps.
| Situation | Typical treatment | What you should pay |
|---|---|---|
| Minor spelling fix, same person (2 to 3 characters) | Most Indian carriers correct this free of charge through their call centre or web form, with a government ID as proof | Nil |
| Correction within 24 hours of booking, where the booking was made at least 7 days before departure | Free change or cancellation under the DGCA's refund rules lookback window offered by airlines | Nil |
| Surname order swapped (given name and surname interchanged) | Usually treated as a minor correction with ID proof | Nil to nominal |
| Name change after marriage, with documents | Allowed by several airlines with the marriage certificate or updated passport | Nil to a small fee |
| Transferring the ticket to a different person | Not permitted by Indian carriers; treated as cancellation plus fresh booking | Cancellation charge plus fare difference |
| Correction routed through an online travel agency (OTA) | OTAs often quote a “name change fee” of Rs 1,500 to Rs 3,000 on top of any airline charge | Often avoidable, see below |
Two cautions. These are policy snapshots; airlines change their rules, so check the current conditions of carriage on the airline website before paying anything. And no DGCA rule fixes name-correction fees. The contract of carriage governs, which is exactly why the dispute is winnable when the airline's own published policy says the correction is free.
Airlines are private companies and ticket terms are contractual. The DGCA mandates refund timelines and denied-boarding compensation, but it does not price name corrections. That cuts both ways. The airline may charge what its published tariff says, but it cannot charge more than its own published policy, and an OTA cannot invent a fee the airline does not levy. Your dispute file is therefore built on screenshots: the airline's name-correction policy page, your booking, and the fee you were quoted.
A couple booked Mumbai to Port Blair honeymoon tickets through an OTA in April 2026. The bride's name was entered as “Pooja Sharrma”. The OTA quoted Rs 2,950 per ticket as a “name amendment fee”. Instead of paying, she called the airline directly with the PNR. The airline confirmed that a correction of up to three characters is free with an ID, and fixed both tickets in eleven minutes. She then raised a written complaint with the OTA for quoting a charge the airline does not levy, and the OTA waived its own Rs 500 service fee as a goodwill credit. Total saved: Rs 5,900. The lesson: the airline owns the PNR; always price the correction with the airline before paying an intermediary.
Nowhere against the airline or OTA; both are private and outside the RTI Act. The only RTI angle is to the DGCA or the Ministry of Civil Aviation, for example to ask whether any directions exist on name-correction charges or what action followed an AirSewa grievance you filed. If you go that route, see how to file RTI online and why RTI gets rejected so the application is not wasted.
Most Indian carriers describe the free fix as a minor correction, commonly up to three characters, for the same passenger. The exact allowance is in each airline's conditions of carriage, so quote the airline's own page when you call.
Domestic security checks match the name to your government ID. If the ID and ticket reasonably match, travel is normally smooth, but for international flights fix the ticket to match the passport exactly. Airlines treat passport mismatches strictly because carriers face penalties for documentation errors.
Ask the airline to make the change directly on the PNR and email you the revised itinerary. The airline controls the reservation. Then complain to the OTA in writing about the obstruction.
Yes. The flight does not erase an overcharge. Demand the refund in writing, escalate to NCH, and file on e-Daakhil within the two-year limitation if the amount justifies it.
No. The DGCA does not regulate these fees. Your protection is the airline's own published policy plus consumer law against unfair charges, not a tariff order.
The marriage certificate, or a passport or Aadhaar showing the new name. Send self-attested copies with the correction request and carry the original when you fly.
Download the airline name correction checklist (PDF).