Burton Mail

Airline boss in flight price hike warning for summer

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RYANAIR boss Michael O’leary has warned flight prices could rise by nearly 10% this summer due to soaring demand for European holidays.

He said holidaymak­ers should brace for prices to rise by a “high single-digit per cent” over the peak season as demand for breaks on European beach resorts rebounds thanks to the lifting of pandemic travel restrictio­ns.

The budget airline’s chief executive also said there were likely to be ongoing delays at airports, blaming staff shortages.

Mr O’leary said there are “pinchpoint­s”, in particular at Heathrow and Manchester, where he claimed “too many people” have been sacked. He added he hoped to see the worst of the delays ease off in time for the busy summer season, but stressed it would still be a “challenge” for passengers getting through UK airports.

The comments came as Ryanair reported annual underlying losses narrowing to 355 million euros (£302 million) and said it hopes to return to “reasonable profitabil­ity” in the current financial year.

But it cautioned that despite a bounce back in passengers and bookings, the recovery “remains fragile”. Mr O’leary’s comments mark the latest pricing alert ahead of the peak season, after holiday giant Tui last week said it would not be offering last-minute, low-price deals this summer due to a recovery in customer demand.

Ryanair signalled prices would ramp up over the next few months in the sector due to a cut of about 15% in European flight programmes across the sector over the summer.

He told Radio 4’s Today programme: “For the Septemberq­uarter at the moment, based on about 50% of all bookings, we expect prices will be up high single digit per cent. It seems to us that there will be higher prices into that peak summer period because there’s so much demand for the beaches of Europe and those price rises going to continue.”

The group said its peak fares for this summer may rise above those seen before the pandemic struck.

The group’s loss for the year to March 31 was smaller than expected and narrowed from the 1.02 billion euros (£867 million) losses seen the previous year, when trading was badly impacted by the pandemic.

It saw demand recover strongly as it carried 97.1 million passengers, up from just 27.5 million the year before thanks to the lifting of pandemic restrictio­ns.

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