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BackRyanair Faces Investigation Over Mandatory Fee to Sit With Children
Ryanair Faces Investigation Over Mandatory Fee to Sit With Children
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Guardian UK11.06.2026Law3 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

Ryanair Faces Investigation Over Mandatory Fee to Sit With Children

Auf einen Blick

  • Ryanair is under investigation by the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) over its mandatory fee for parents to sit with their children.
  • The CMA will assess if this fee, typically £8 per flight, constitutes an unfair contract term under consumer law, as other airlines do not charge for this.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

Ryanair is being investigated by the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) over its policy of charging parents a fee to sit with their children. The CMA views this as a potential unfair contract term under consumer law.

Schriftgröße

Europe’s biggest low-cost airline, Ryanair, is facing an investigation over the mandatory fee it charges a parent to sit with their child.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said the Irish carrier’s terms and conditions require at least one parent to sit with their children, including those with disabilities, and bills them about £8 per flight to do so.

The watchdog will investigate whether this is an unfair contract term under consumer law. It understands that Ryanair is the only large airline flying out of the UK to impose this charge.

Hayley Fletcher, the CMA senior director of consumer protection, said: “Our investigation will consider Ryanair’s approach to family seat reservations and how the cost is presented to consumers to determine whether they comply with consumer law.

“For the past year, we’ve told businesses to ensure their customers are shown the total price upfront – those who don’t face the very real possibility of action from the CMA.”

Ryanair said that it does not charge any fee for children to sit beside their parent of accompanying adult. However, parents and guardians must pay a booking fee to be seated next to them.

The carrier’s rules state that at least one parent must sit with their children aged 2-11 when they fly, through a “mandatory family seat”. This fee is levied on both outbound and return flights.

Reserving one of these seats costs between €4.50 and €13.50, which is equivalent to £4-£12, and is typically £8 each way. The CMA has founded that this approach is used across most of Ryanair’s UK routes. For all other passengers, reserving a seat is optional.

The CMA is investigating whether Ryanair’s approach may mean parents are being charged for the airline to meet its child safety and disability‑related obligations as set out under aviation rules, to determine whether or not this practice is in line with consumer law.

Specifically, its investigation relates to whether Ryanair’s contract terms are “unfair”, meaning they put customers at an unfair disadvantage.

The law applies a fairness test that asks whether the wording tilts the balance of rights and responsibilities in the contract too much in favour of the business. Unfair terms are not legally binding on customers, and the CMA can take enforcement action to stop businesses using them.

Other airlines offer to seat children with a parent or guardian without charging adults for a seat reservation, or allocate seats together automatically during booking for free.

As part of the investigation, the CMA will also examine whether the mandatory family seat fee is “dripped” during the booking process without full transparency. “Drip pricing”, when consumers are shown an initial price only to be hit with unavoidable hidden fees later in the process, was banned in 2024.

The CMA has just begun its investigation, and stressed that it had reached no conclusions about whether Ryanair has broken the law. It said the inquiry is part of its wider work to help ease cost of living pressures and protect vulnerable consumers.

Worauf zu achten ist

KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten

  • The CMA will likely issue a ruling on whether Ryanair's policy violates consumer law.

    Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

  • Ryanair may be required to change its seat reservation policy for families.

    Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

Offene Fragen

  • Will Ryanair be found to have broken consumer law?
  • What specific enforcement actions might the CMA take?
  • Will Ryanair change its policy if found in breach?
  • Are there other airlines with similar practices?

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This article was originally published by Guardian UK.

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