Ryanair investigated over charging parents to sit with children
Published Thursday, June 11, 2026 · Updated June 11
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BalancedMedia Analysis
AI synthesisThe UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has launched an investigation into Ryanair's policy of charging parents to sit with their children on flights. The watchdog considers these fees potentially unfair under consumer law. Ryanair has denied the claims, asserting its policy is compliant with existing laws.
What We Know — Key Points
Key points are extracted by an AI model and may contain errors or omissions. Always check the original sources.- Ryanair is being investigated by the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) over charges it imposes on parents to sit next to their children on flights.
- Ryanair denies the claims, stating its policy complies with laws and allows free child seats when an adult pays for one.
What Is Claimed — Perspectives
- BBC NewsCenter
The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is investigating Ryanair for its policy of charging parents to sit with their children on flights, which the watchdog considers potentially unfair under consumer law. Ryanair denies the claims, stating its policy complies with laws and allows free child seats when an adult pays for one.
- Read original →· Jun 11
- The GuardianLeft-leaning
The article highlights the regulatory scrutiny on Ryanair's potentially unfair business practices, emphasizing consumer protection and the safeguarding of vulnerable customers against hidden fees.
- Read original →· Jun 11
- Sky NewsCenter-Right
Europe's largest airline is under investigation by the UK's competition watchdog. The probe concerns its policy of charging parents extra to sit with their children.
- Read original →· Jun 11
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