Western Mail

Travel industry calls for amendment of rules to save firms

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TRAVEL firms will collapse and taxpayers will be left with a multibilli­on-pound bill unless UK refund rules are amended, a trade associatio­n has claimed.

Abta wants the Government to allow companies to offer credit notes as a “short-term alternativ­e” to cash refunds because of the deluge of claims caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Under EU law, travel companies must refund customers within 14 days if their holiday is cancelled. But many travel firms will be unable to survive if they are forced to pay cash refunds immediatel­y, according to Abta.

This is partly due to a delay in them receiving money back from airlines and hotels.

Countries such as France, Italy, Belgium, Spain, Germany, the Netherland­s and Denmark have amended their refund rules on a temporary basis, and Abta says the UK must also take action.

Refund credit notes could be exchanged for an alternativ­e booking or a full cash refund at a later date. They would be financiall­y protected, ensuring consumers’ money would be secure.

Abta warned that if the UK does not change its policy, firms will be pushed into bankruptcy, leaving the Government – which acts as the financial backer for the UK’s main Atol scheme of holiday protection – with a bill of up to £4.5bn to refund customers.

Mark Tanzer, Abta chief executive, said: “We know the Government has a lot to manage with the current crisis, but its failure to make these temporary changes to refund rules defies logic and is leaving the consumer in no-man’s land.

“The rules around 14-day refunds were never designed for the mass cancellati­on of holidays, which we’re now seeing as result of Government measures to contain the pandemic.”

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