Daily Mail

Holiday fear as price of f lights trebles amid cancellati­ons

- By David Churchill Transport Editor

FAMILIES could be priced out of summer holidays as fares soar after airlines axed thousands of flights.

On Wednesday British Airways cut 10,300 flights to Europe until the end of October - on top of the 16,000 it axed in March.

It means that nearly a fifth of BA flights scheduled until the autumn will not take off. Last month, easyJet cut more than 10,000 of its flights.

The combinatio­n of fewer seats and soaring post-Covid demand means that prices on some holiday routes have more than trebled, analysis by the Daily Mail found.

Airlines lost billions during the pandemic and will be looking to increase their margins on the seats they have. Even flights with Ryanair, typically the cheapest carrier, have soared. Fares from London to Gran Canaria were £156.60 on July 16, but £368.69 a week later. Flights to Madeira and Rhodes jumped from £72.80 to £349.20 and from £89.99 to £351.20.

BA has pushed up the price of tickets to Faro in the Algarve and to Crete, which are usually only a few hundred pounds, to more than £600 and £500 respective­ly.

EasyJet fares from Gatwick to Rome on July 16 were selling yesterday for £226.99, but on July 23, the first weekend of the school holidays, the price had almost doubled to £441.99. For flights to Crete and Majorca on the same dates prices jumped from £178.99 to £383.99 and from £61.99 to £138.99 respective­ly.

Even flights with Ryanair, typically the cheapest carrier, have soared. Fares from London to Gran Canaria were £156.60 on July 16, but £368.69 a week later. Flights to Madeira and

Rhodes jumped from £72.80 to £349.20 and from £89.99 to £351.20.

Although passengers whose flights are cancelled are entitled to a seat on another flight – or a refund – there is no guarantee there will be enough seats and they could be priced out of alternativ­e flights.

The boss of holiday airline Jet2 blamed the chaos at airports, and the subsequent flight cancellati­ons, on the companies that run them.

Referring to the staff crisis after thousands were laid off in the pandemic, Philip Meeson said airports were ‘ woefully ill-prepared and poorly resourced’.

It was ‘inexcusabl­e, bearing in mind our flights have been on sale for many months’, he added.

The Airport Operators Associatio­n said staff recruitmen­t campaigns for security staff were progressin­g well. A spokesman added that airports were also working closely with companies managing check-in and baggage on behalf of airlines to alleviate any delays.

■ Unions yesterday suspended a strike by 700 BA check-in staff and baggage handlers at Heathrow on the last two weekends of the month after an improved pay offer.

‘Poorly resourced’

 ?? ?? ‘As flights are so expensive I’m afraid only I can go on holiday this year’
‘As flights are so expensive I’m afraid only I can go on holiday this year’

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