Ryanair ends family seating surcharge after UK regulator opens probe

Ryanair will no longer charge families to sit together on flights after the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) opened an investigation into the airline’s policy, the company announced on Thursday, 25 June 2026. The budget carrier confirmed that from today, adults travelling with children aged 2 to 11 can receive free seat assignments at check-in if they do not pay for seat selection, ending a controversial £8 (€9.30) surcharge for guaranteed family seating.
The change follows a probe launched earlier this month by the CMA to assess whether the fee constituted an unfair commercial practice under UK consumer law. Ryanair had previously required parents to pay for at least one “family seat” to ensure children sat beside them, a policy the regulator argued could penalise families for meeting basic safety obligations. Under the new rules, families who opt against paid seat selection will receive random free seats, though Ryanair warned these are more likely to be in the rear of the aircraft, as forward rows tend to fill first.
Michael O’Leary, Ryanair’s chief executive, criticised the CMA’s intervention, calling it an attempt to impose a “less transparent and less consumer-friendly” seating policy simply because it is industry standard. “We are reluctantly adapting to the sector norm,” O’Leary stated in a company statement, adding that the airline does not intend to waste time explaining to regulators what benefits consumers most.
The decision aligns Ryanair with most European carriers, which already allocate free adjacent seats to families during check-in. Passengers who still wish to choose specific seats can continue paying the optional fee. The CMA has not yet concluded its investigation, but the airline’s immediate reversal suggests regulatory pressure has forced a swift policy shift.
Consumer advocates welcomed the move. “Families should not have to pay extra to keep children safe and comfortable,” said Sarah Thompson, spokesperson for the UK-based Families Travel Group. “This change removes a financial barrier that disproportionately affected lower-income households.” Ryanair, which operates over 200 UK routes, has not disclosed the financial impact of the policy reversal but confirmed it applies to all new bookings from today.
The development comes amid broader scrutiny of airline pricing practices across Europe, with regulators increasingly focusing on ancillary fees that critics argue exploit passenger needs. While Ryanair’s concession addresses one of the most contentious charges, industry observers note that other budget airlines may face similar pressure to review family seating policies in the coming months.
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