Ryanair ‘reluctantly’ allows parents to sit with their children for free

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DUBLIN, June 25 (Reuters) – Ryanair will “reluctantly” allow parents to sit with their children for free from Thursday, a change it said would be ​revenue-neutral and comes two weeks after Britain’s competition watchdog launched ‌a probe into its policy.
Europe’s largest airline by passenger numbers previously required adults travelling with children aged between 2 and 11 to pay a “family seat” ​charge, allowing up to four children to sit next to ​one accompanying adult.
Britain’s Competition and Markets Authority said the surcharge typically ⁠cost around £8 ($10.70) each way and may constitute forcing parents to ​pay Ryanair to meet its own child safety and disability obligations under ​aviation rules.
The budget carrier said families still have the option of paying the charge to reserve seats. Otherwise, they will be allocated random seats together for ​free after check-in, likely towards the rear of the plane.
“We ​will reluctantly adjust to this industry standard as we don’t want to waste time ‌explaining ⁠to misguided regulators how badly they misunderstand what is in the best interest of UK and Europe’s consumers,” Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary said in a statement.
The airline accused Europe’s regulators of stifling innovation ​and progress in ​requiring Ireland-based Ryanair ⁠to align its policy with that of most other European Union airlines.
A CMA spokesperson said it will ​test whether the new policy complies with the ​law and ⁠that if it does, the change will be “a win for families.”
“But it doesn’t change the fact families have been paying for ‘mandatory family seats.’ ⁠Our ​investigation remains ongoing,” the spokesperson said.
Ryanair reiterated ​that its previous policy fully complies with all relevant laws and regulations.

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