Domestic Partnership??

Jflyer

Well-Known Member
Hey all! Trying to get things lined up before my class date at SkyWest to get the bf on my flight benefits. The thing I was hoping to do (and seemed the easiest) was to get a state issued domestic partnership. We plan to get married, but don't want to do it now just for the sake of travel benefits. :)

I've been doing some research and it seems that some states only allow opposite-sex domestic partnerships if one person is over 62! Does anyone have any suggestions? Would appreciate any help! :)
 
Some airlines allow a single employee (single as in not married, not in a domestic partnership) to designate a "travel companion". This travel companion holds the same travel benefits as a spouse, but there's no requirement to be in a marriage or any other sort of legal relationship. Generally the employee is allowed to designate a person as a travel companion either once a year or such, so that employees aren't constantly switching their travel partner.
 
I've been doing some research and it seems that some states only allow opposite-sex domestic partnerships if one person is over 62! Does anyone have any suggestions? Would appreciate any help! :)

Apply when you're 62.
 
Some airlines allow a single employee (single as in not married, not in a domestic partnership) to designate a "travel companion". This travel companion holds the same travel benefits as a spouse, but there's no requirement to be in a marriage or any other sort of legal relationship. Generally the employee is allowed to designate a person as a travel companion either once a year or such, so that employees aren't constantly switching their travel partner.


I'd wanted him to have the same benefits as I do, and have the requirements that SkyWest needs to do that (state domestic partnership being the easiest), but you're right...maybe I could individually add him on Delta or United and such. Need to look at that.
 
Hey all! Trying to get things lined up before my class date at SkyWest to get the bf on my flight benefits. The thing I was hoping to do (and seemed the easiest) was to get a state issued domestic partnership. We plan to get married, but don't want to do it now just for the sake of travel benefits. :)

I've been doing some research and it seems that some states only allow opposite-sex domestic partnerships if one person is over 62! Does anyone have any suggestions? Would appreciate any help! :)

My finacee (opposite sex) is my domestic partner for all benefits, IIRC the only thing the company (Mesaba) needed for the DP was a letter signing that we intended to care for each other, had a shared checking account, and have blah blah blah committment to each other and junk.

I don't recall anything about same sex vs opposite sex, but I wasn't looking real close either. Hope that helps
 
Some airlines allow a single employee (single as in not married, not in a domestic partnership) to designate a "travel companion". This travel companion holds the same travel benefits as a spouse, but there's no requirement to be in a marriage or any other sort of legal relationship. Generally the employee is allowed to designate a person as a travel companion either once a year or such, so that employees aren't constantly switching their travel partner.

Delta, for one, does not offer travel companions travel benefits equivalent to a spouse. In fact they're far inferior.
 
Delta, for one, does not offer travel companions travel benefits equivalent to a spouse. In fact they're far inferior.

At AMR we had the "Registered Companion" program for travel benefits. Bill was my RC when I was still working and before we were married, and I do remember DL not having a similar designation. The few times we traveled together on DL before we were married I was on a buddy pass. Every airline has different specific benefits, and I have no clue what Skywest offers, I was just tossing that out there as a possibility, and something to look into.
 
I know in Oregon, over 18 is the age requirement for a domestic partnership. But the same paperwork is required to end a domestic partnership as is required for divorce. A court ordered dissolution, with a $400 fee.

In California it's easy. A $10 fee to register and no fee to terminate.

Check the state laws of your state(s) of residence, they are the only ones which matter.
 
At AMR we had the "Registered Companion" program for travel benefits. Bill was my RC when I was still working and before we were married, and I do remember DL not having a similar designation. The few times we traveled together on DL before we were married I was on a buddy pass. Every airline has different specific benefits, and I have no clue what Skywest offers, I was just tossing that out there as a possibility, and something to look into.

Yeah, carrier specific protocol is what I had in mind with that one-line post. Doh. It was intended in the spirit of "check the Human Resources Policy Manual for further details," not to be as snippy as it sounded. :crazy:
 
At AMR we had the "Registered Companion" program for travel benefits. Bill was my RC when I was still working and before we were married, and I do remember DL not having a similar designation. The few times we traveled together on DL before we were married I was on a buddy pass. Every airline has different specific benefits, and I have no clue what Skywest offers, I was just tossing that out there as a possibility, and something to look into.

CAL has the same... I don't know what will become of it with United...
 
I was just commenting that they seem to want the benefits of marriage without actually commiting to one another.
 
I was just commenting that they seem to want the benefits of marriage without actually commiting to one another.
Well, yeah...that's kinda the idea/the point of the thread, isn't it?

Unrelated note, long about tax time I look at the standard deduction and wish I were married, because the IRS really puts the screws to single people. :(
 
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