Dan Smith
Legal Director
Head of Advertising Law (UK)
Article
5
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has fastened its seatbelt and prepared for take-off on a fresh investigation, this time targeting Ryanair's charges for parents to sit with their children.
The CMA’s investigation goes to the heart of two key consumer law principles: fairness and price transparency.
Ryanair's terms require that at least one parent sits with a child aged 2 – 11, the so-called "mandatory family seat", which the parent must pay for. For all other passengers, reserving a seat is optional.
The CMA is likely to scrutinise whether this amounts to an ‘unfair’ contract term. In particular, there will be questions over whether consumers are effectively being required to pay in order for the airline to deliver on what may be underlying safety or accessibility expectations.
Alongside this, the CMA is examining how these charges are presented during the booking journey. A key issue will be whether the fee is “drip priced” – i.e. not clearly included upfront but introduced later in the purchase process. This is contrary to consumer law and is an area of increasing enforcement focus.
The direction of travel is clear. The CMA has already signalled a crackdown on drip pricing with its 'major consumer drive' launched late last year. One of these investigations has already concluded and we saw the CMA issue a fine of £4.2 million against AA and BSM driving schools for 'dripped' booking fees.
While the Ryanair investigation remains at an early stage, it is part of a broader regulatory shift: dripped prices are very high risk. Businesses engaging in this practice are unlikely to fly under the radar for long.
For businesses, the takeaway is clear:
Enforcement has already begun, now is the time to act. Speak to Dan Smith or Zoe Pearman for advice.
CECI NE CONSTITUE PAS UN AVIS JURIDIQUE. L'information qui est présentée dans le site Web sous quelque forme que ce soit est fournie à titre informatif uniquement. Elle ne constitue pas un avis juridique et ne devrait pas être interprétée comme tel. Aucun utilisateur ne devrait prendre ou négliger de prendre des décisions en se fiant uniquement à ces renseignements, ni ignorer les conseils juridiques d'un professionnel ou tarder à consulter un professionnel sur la base de ce qu'il a lu dans ce site Web. Les professionnels de Gowling WLG seront heureux de discuter avec l'utilisateur des différentes options possibles concernant certaines questions juridiques précises.
Gowling WLG est un cabinet juridique international constitué des membres de Gowling WLG International Limited, une société à responsabilité limitée par garanties enregistrée en Angleterre, ainsi que leurs affiliés respectifs. Les membres et affiliés constituent des entités autonomes et indépendantes. Gowling WLG International Limited promeut, facilite et coordonne les activités de ses membres, mais ne fournit pas elle-même de services aux clients. Pour en savoir davantage sur notre structure, consultez notre page Avis juridique.
© 2026 Gowling WLG Tous droits réservés