Under EC261 rules, you are entitled to a refund if the airline cancels the flight.
However, currently most airlines are starved for cash, and are unable to meet their legal obligations. Most will at least try to convince you to take a voucher rather than get a refund. Some will (illegally) not even give you the option and only provide a voucher and no refund.
Even if the airline does not categorically reject the idea of a refund, your chances of getting it timely (by law, you should receive it within 7 days) are slim to none these days.
If you have any way to get the money back via your card issuer (notably if you paid with a credit card), you should most probably pursue that option, though the details vary a lot based on your country of residence and the specific card used. Debit cards usually offer much less protection in this case.
As you are travelling on an “incumbent” airline which will most probably be rescued by the government if needed, your best option is probably to take a voucher or reschedule to a much later date. For smaller non-state-backed airlines which are at risk of bankruptcy, a voucher may prove not to be worth more than the electrons it was emitted with.
Note that it your flight is part of a package (flight+hotel for instance), then the travel agent who sold it to you is required to be insured to be able to refund you. However, even in those cases, I’m not sure the guarantee funds are sufficient to cover all the refunds that would need to be made.
Wait until the policy is official.
Should I expect Lufthansa or Trip.com to contact me in light of this?
On your Trip.com booking, you can check under [Booking details] then under [Cancellation details] for a trip cancellation. If no cancellation information is there you should wait until the flight is cancelled by Lufthansa.
Can I get a refund? If so, will the money go to Trip.com and then their refund policies applies? Is there a chance I may not get my money back?
The refund will have to be processed by Lufthansa. Lufthansa currently offers to re-book your flight if it is cancelled. Since Argentina has banned flights, you can re-book the flight and apply for a FlightVoucher worth €50, to qualify:
All customers with unused Lufthansa tickets issued prior to 19th April 2020 and with a travel date through 31st December 2020 are eligible for this offer. Rebooking and redemption of the discount must take place no later than 31st August 2020.
This can be applied for on the linked page.
Would it be advisable to try to contact Lufthansa directly to reschedule, or would this mean I have to go through Trip.com for this?
If you have a Lufthansa booking reference, there is no need to go through Trip.com (unless Trip.com says it can get you a refund and you want one)
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024