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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

On The Beach hails Ryanair court win and slams airlines for ‘anti-competitive behaviours’

Travel giant calls for regulation of sector

On The Beach is a leading player in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ holiday market(Image: Getty Images)

Travel giant On The Beach has slammed low cost airlines for their “anti competitive behaviours” - and has vowed to keep pursuing Ryanair after a £2m court victory.

The Manchester group today announced record revenues for 2023 - and also said it had won a legal claim against Ryanair over outstanding refunds on cancelled or changed flights. It said it had been awarded £2m plus interest and costs.

OTB said it intended to pursue Ryanair “for further sums due in similar circumstances”. And it also called for action from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) over the actions of low-cost airlines.

, CEO Shaun Morton said the travel industry urgently needed “holistic and comprehensive regulatory reform” to create a level playing field for businesses and consumers.

He said: “For most customers in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ who are booking their annual beach package holiday, this will likely be the biggest investment they will make throughout the year, unless they are moving house or changing their car. A recent study found that households spend a quarter of their disposable income on holidays. It is therefore critical that competition in the market is healthy to ensure value, choice, flexibility and consumer protection.

“However, the market power of the few airlines operating popular leisure routes from the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, and how that power manifests itself to the detriment of consumers, poses a serious threat to fair competition and choice for consumers. Low cost airlines ('LCA') are using anti-competitive behaviours to stop consumers booking through online travel agents, harming consumers in the process.

“These increasingly sophisticated anti-competitive behaviours include blocking OTA (online travel agency) bookings, reducing or removing seats to certain destinations, making them completely unbookable by OTAs or consumers unless booked directly with the airline; harming the consumer experience with onerous verifications only applied to bookings made with an OTA; and false and misleading smear campaigns that cast doubt in the minds of consumers about the validity and benefits of booking package holidays with OTAs.”

Mr Morton said OTB has surveyed customers for a white paper- and found half of those polled believed low-cost airlines treated travellers badly.