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Jun 25, 2026
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Ryanair Changes Family Seating Policy After UK Watchdog Investigation

AI Summary
Ryanair has changed its family seating policy to offer free seats next to children after a UK competition watchdog investigation. The new policy allows adults to be seated next to their children at no extra charge, but at the rear of the plane.

Ryanair's New Family Seating Policy

Ryanair has changed its family seating policy, after Britain’s competition watchdog launched an investigation into the airline’s charges for parents to sit with their children. Europe’s largest airline said that as of Thursday, adults would be offered “free of charge” seats next to their children after they have checked in for their flight – but at the rear of the plane. All children on the booking will be allocated seats alongside them for no fee.

The Investigation and Previous Policy

Until now, Ryanair required parents travelling with children aged between two and 11 to pay to reserve what it referred to as a mandatory family seat, while up to four children can sit alongside them without a charge. This prompted the CMA to open an investigation to determine whether Ryanair’s policy at the time was “in line with consumer law”. It found that the fee for a mandatory family seat was typically about £8 each way.

The Impact of the New Policy

Ryanair said the change would not have an impact on its revenues. The airline's chief executive, Michael O’Leary, accused the watchdog of “turning a blind eye” to the “high fares” charged by airlines on routes with no competition from the Dublin-based carrier. He said: “The CMA has now targeted our family seating policy which has been universally embraced by consumers as the most progressive and transparent in Europe.

The Future of Airline Policies

“Instead of promoting competitiveness and lower fares for consumers, the CMA is on a mission to force Ryanair to adopt the less transparent and less consumer-friendly family seating policy applied by most other airlines – just because it’s the industry standard. 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.