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Ryanair once made life easy for passengers – but now the airline seems to be doing the opposite

ICONSUMER TRAVEL EXPERT

n its efforts to keep headline fares down, has Ryanair got caught in its own marketing web? Last week its CEO, Michael O’Leary, complained publicly that the airline is facing problems because so many of its passengers have been choosing to avoid paying an additional £5 priority boarding fee (£10 for a return fare) that they are causing “handling issues”.

The fee is what you have had to pay Ryanair since January to be sure that you can take hand baggage above a certain size with you in the cabin. Those who don’t pay the priority fee have larger bags taken off them at the gate and put in the hold (there is no extra charge for this, though obviously you may get held up waiting for them at the carousel on arrival).

According to O’Leary, up to 120 cabin bags are now having to be put in the hold on busy flights.

You might think that the obvious solution to this problem would be to reduce the fee. Then more people would surely be prepared to pay up for the sake of the greater convenienc­e of keeping their hand baggage with them.

But despite the problem highlighte­d by O’Leary, this week it emerged that the airline has recently increased many of its priority boarding fees. No announceme­nt was made, but when we did a spot check on several routes, the fee being charged had risen from £10 to £12 on a return fare.

Other extras are also prone to higher rates on some routes. This week we found plenty of examples of fees applying to some flights that are much higher than the fees quoted on the website. Seat selection at £10, rather than the £4 minimum; extra legroom seats from

£20, rather than £15; and checked-in baggage at £35 each way, up from the lowest charge of £25 quoted on the fees page. Ryanair told us that there has always been a price range on optional extras and that it makes it clear on its

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website, and higher prices may be applicable on some routes and not on others.

But I think the point here is a more fundamenta­l one: in its efforts to make its fares seem cheap, Ryanair has become addicted to complexity.

Years ago, when the airline first started to strip “optional” extras, like hold baggage, out of its base prices, it was a refreshing­ly innovative strategy.

A significan­t number of travellers – including me – who used it for short breaks never checked in hold baggage in any case, so it seemed like a win. We got lower fares, which recognised the fact that it was costing Ryanair less to carry us.

Now the airline’s pricing system has become so labyrinthi­ne – there are so many options, incentives and disincenti­ves – that it has become

JANE ARCHER

CRUISE EXPERT seriously hard work for customers to work out whether they are getting good value. Instead of rewarding them, some of the litany of extras feel as though they are designed to punish the frugal flier.

Don’t want to pay extra to sit next to your travelling companion? There’s a good chance you will find yourselves separated and sitting in middle seats in different parts of the aircraft. Want to avoid checking in a bag? Pay up or we’ll take it away at the gate.

Ryanair soared to success because it was focused, agile, innovative and efficient. We may not have liked its attitude to its customers, but at least we knew where we stood – the planes were new, they were generally on time and fares were highly competitiv­e.

There were always irritating

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Ryanair has become addicted to complexity
TIME TO REFLECT Ryanair has become addicted to complexity

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