I just came to this site and this worked for me:
I checked in to aa.com and re-saved my contact email and phone. This updated the reservation and I then got an email from BA 1 minute later showing the 6-digit BA locator and I was able to add it to my BA iphone app using that locator. Unexpected but it worked.
This is an addition to the thread after a long interval, and so may be anachronistic in multiple ways.
At least as of this moment, entering one’s AA Record Locator into the “Booking Reference” field of www.britishairways.com –> Manage Booking –> Find Booking (along with the passenger’s last name) returns the BA Record Locator in the “Booking Reference” field. Hope this helps someone.
i found a way that seems very reliable and is entirely online, for bookings made by AA:
First, have tripcase (owned by Sabre) link to the AA-created itinerary:
Now, for this or any trip:
The PNRs for the operating carriers should appear at the top, right after the AA PNR.
It’s sadly true that it can be quite difficult to obtain the partner PNRs for tickets issued by AA. Here are a few ways:
In addition, as noted in other answers, often the BA site will accept your AA locator, but I didn’t include it above because it can’t be relied on to always work.
Here’s a screen shot of an AA email that contains the BA locator:
There are two ways, depending on the kind of BA flight you booked with AA.
If you booked the BA flight under the AA flight number, eg American Airlines
flight 6543, Operated by British Airways, then all you need to do is add your British Airways Executive Club number to the booking. After a few minutes, log into your BAEC account, and look at your upcoming bookings. You’ll find in there your BA booking reference for the BA legs, and will be able to select your seat, see avios to be earnt etc.
if you booked the BA flight under the BA flight number, eg British Airways
flight BA 345, then for some reason your BAEC details won’t get passed over. What you need to do is, bizarrely, go to the Qantas “Manage My Booking” page, and enter your American Airlines reference. Scroll down to the Seats section of the page, and you’ll see something like:
Seat selection is only available for flights operated by Qantas. To select seats and manage your booking, visit British Airways site with your booking reference #12ABCD
Then take that booking reference shown there, go to the BA website, use that with Manage My Booking, then enter your BAEC details + pick seats + see avios details + etc
In summary:
I cannot guarantee it will be work in every scenario, but at least in this case, I found an answer.
It appears sometime after ticketing, the American Airlines number will work in the BA MMB page, as suggested by IKeelYou – somewhat. I tried it again this morning and it gave me an error, stating that it couldn’t find the reservation, but pre-populated the reservation number box on the error page with a different reservation code. I tried this reservation code from the MMB page, and lo and behold – my reservation!
Seems like BA’s website needs some bug-fixing, but I do at least have access now.
This is strange that through the BA Manage My Booking tool you cannot access your reservation. According to multiple resources you should be able to access it.
These sources suggest different ways to pick a seat. BA uses Amadeus for its bookings so if this does not work on BA tools you can try Amadeus’ CheckMyTrip, the tool made to consult an Amadeus booking to obtain your BA PNR (to be identified on its website). Another possibility is to read your e-ticket and search for a reference to an Amadeus PNR (it has 6 alphanumeric characters). Finally there is a suggestion that BA may let only oneworld Sapphire and Emerald members pick a seat. And apparently BA bookings include AA PNR when you log on BA.com so maybe it works also the other way around, when logging on AA.com you might find the BA PNR.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
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