The Mail on Sunday

Great half- term rip- off

Parents’ anger as holiday and theme park giants charge adult prices for 12-year- olds

- By Jonathan Bucks

CASH- STRAPPED parents are being forced to pay adult prices for children at many of Britain’s most popular attraction­s, a Mail on Sunday investigat­ion has revealed.

Astonishin­gly, dozens of theme parks and historical sites – which will be packed this week with families enjoying the schools’ halfterm break – define anyone aged 12 and over as an adult and bump up the price.

Last night, politician­s and campaigner­s accused ‘cynical’ bosses of ‘bleeding families dry’.

Even holiday companies are joining the rip-off. In one of the most shocking examples, online travel company lastminute. com advertised a half-term break on the sunshine island of Majorca for a family of four that shot up in price if both children were 12 or over.

Flights and seven nights at a fourstar hotel for parents and two 11-year-olds costs £3,682. But the price of same holiday leaps to £4,832 once the children are 12.

Four days at Disneyland Paris costs £616 when children are 11 but £688 when they turn 12.

Warwick Castle also hikes prices at the same age, with a £102 trip jumping to £108.

At Thorpe Park i n Surrey, a family of four with two 11-year-olds pays £200.80 – with two 12-yearolds the price rises to £214. Nearby Chessingto­n World of Adventures charges a family of four with two 11- year- old ‘ young adventurer­s’ £204. But that rises to £211 when the children are 12.

Our investigat­ion also found that the Natural History Museum and Somerset House ice rinks, both in London, charge full price from age 13, while Odeon and Vue cinemas also increase their prices at that age. Sports presenter Gabby Logan, who has 12-year-old twins, Lois and Reuben, with her husband Kenny, said: ‘ Anything that prevents a family from an activity because of this kind of price hike is really quite disgusting. This is a miserly and cynical practice.’

Conservati­ve MP Nigel Evans, who sits on the Tourism, Leisure and Hospitalit­y Industry All-Party Parliament­ary Committee, said: ‘Twelve is way too young to start charging adult prices.

‘The way these attraction­s are artificial­ly turning children into adults is absurd.’

He accused companies of ‘bleeding hard-pressed families dry’.

Paul Kelly, chief executive of the British Associatio­n of Leisure, Parks, Piers and Attraction­s, defended the price rises.

‘Once customers turn 12 they are able to enjoy the entirety of the experience available, as much as any adult visiting the attraction,’ he said.

But Ms Logan countered: ‘All 12year-olds look very different but they’re certainly not adults. They don’t have any adult rights, responsibi­lities or privileges, so why do they suddenly have to live a more expensive life?’

Last night, a spokesman for Merlin, which owns Chessingto­n World of Adventures, Thorpe Park and Warwick Castle, said: ‘We aim to provide good value for everyone at all our attraction­s and strongly refute any suggestion that we charge unfairly.’

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