But price of holiday tests goes up by 60% in a week
THE price of coronavirus travel tests has actually escalated over the past week despite repeated Government promises to drive down the cost, the Mail can reveal.
Even though ministers have repeatedly pledged to make travel testing more affordable, the official Government website for booking ‘gold standard’ PCR tests has instead seen prices rise by 60 per cent.
Analysis shared with the Mail suggests the average cost for a package of two PCR tests advertised by the 50 cheapest Governmentapproved providers was £46 on Thursday.
But last night it stood at £75 – an increase of 63 per cent in just four days.
And in reality, the true cost facing families is likely to be much higher – with the average price usually twice as high as the one listed once the tests are actually booked.
This is because, when holidaymakers click through to the companies’ websites, many of the cheapest packages are unavailable – pushing the average price of a two-swab home test package to around £117.
Currently, people returning from amber list countries who are not fully-vaccinated must quarantine for 10 days and take a PCR test on days two and eight of their self-isolation. The requirements are adding hundreds of pounds to the cost of family holidays. Even those who have had both jabs need at least one PCR test after returning to the UK.
These requirements are adding hundreds of pounds to the cost of family holidays, but there has been little in the way of concrete action to reduce the bill for travellers.
The cost of tests could be immediately slashed if the Treasury heeded calls to remove VAT of 20 per cent, but sources last night suggested such a move was no longer being considered.
Removing VAT would reduce the average price of a two-swab home test package from £117 to £97.50.
It comes as research suggested 17million
people are considering going abroad this summer – meaning the Government stands to make £476million in VAT on holiday tests.
Last night Avi Lasarow, of testing firm Prenetics, said: ‘Our research shows if the Government removed VAT, it would not only pay for the flights of a family of four travelling to Majorca, it would also stimulate demand and provide a much needed boost for the hard-hit UK travel industry.’ He called on other firms to promise to pass on potential VAT savings to consumers too.
Yesterday Heathrow chief John Holland-Kaye also urged the Government to ‘get rid of the requirement for everyone to have a PCR test and replace it with a cheaper, simpler lateral flow test and only use the PCR test if people test positive, for genomic purposes’.
THE two sides of Britain’s airports yesterday told two very different stories.
In arrivals, we had joyous scenes as families were tearfully reunited after the Government finally saw sense and dropped quarantine requirements for vaccinated travellers coming from America and the amber-listed EU countries.
Over at the departure gates, however, holidaymakers nervously prepared for a summer break wracked with uncertainty.
The Government’s bewildering fourcoloured traffic-light system has already thrown millions of holidays into chaos, with people cancelling, or rushing home to avoid quarantine when the lights change.
Yet far from simplifying this already muddled system, No10 initially looked intent on complicating things further by introducing two more categories when restrictions are reviewed on Thursday. Traffic lights with six colours? That would have been a recipe for a car crash.
Thankfully, after the Prime Minister announced that he wants the travel rules to be as ‘simple and user friendly as possible’, this ridiculous idea is now dead in the water.
There are encouraging signs too that he’s finally seeing sense on the Covid-19 app by altering it so that fewer people are unnecessarily pinged. But he still needs to go further.
Next week, both Wales and Scotland lift isolation requirements for the doublejabbed completely.
To avoid a harmful schism opening up across the UK, Mr Johnson needs to swallow his pride and follow the devolved nations in consigning this wretched system to the dustbin.
Meanwhile, passengers face the added misery of having to fork out hundreds on expensive PCR tests upon returning to the UK, even from green-listed countries.
Despite repeated promises from ministers to clamp down on government-approved firms charging extortionate fees, many have been increasing their prices.
The Government must remove profiteering companies from its list of providers – and reduce customer costs by exempting PCRs from VAT.
Such changes will come too late for many holidaymakers who’ve seen their plans ruined by weeks of confusion. But act now, and there’s still enough time to save others from this summer of shambles.