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Ryanair toilet charge plan: Spend a pound to spend a penny

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Published Date: 27 February 2009
LOW-fare airline Ryanair is considering charging passengers to use the toilets on its planes, it was revealed today.
Customers of the Irish no-frills carrier might have to fork out £1 to "spend a penny" on flights, Ryanair's chief executive Michael O'Leary said.

Which? Holiday magazine condemned the plan, saying Ryanair was "plumbing the depths".

Speaking on the BBC1 Breakfast programme, Mr O'Leary said: "One thing we have looked at in the past and are looking at again is the possibility of maybe putting a coin slot on the toilet door so that people might actually have to spend a pound to spend a penny in future."

He went on: "We are always looking at ways of making air travel cheaper. We are all about finding ways of raising revenue so we can keep lowering air fares."

Asked if this meant passengers being charged as much as £1 for a loo visit on Ryanair flights, Mr O'Leary replied: "I don't think there is anybody in history that has got on board a Ryanair aircraft with less than a pound."

Rochelle Turner, head of research at Which? Holiday, said: "It seems Ryanair is prepared to plumb any depth to make a fast buck and, once again, is putting profit before the comfort of its customers.

"Charging people to go to the toilet might result in fewer people buying overpriced drinks on board, though – that would serve Ryanair right."

Last week, Ryanair announced it was to shut all check-in desks at airports by the end of the year, with all passengers having to check in online instead.

The Irish budget carrier also charges for hold luggage and – like other low-fare airlines – charges for on-board food and drink.


Is Michael O'Leary's idea a step too far by the frugal airline or a clever way of reducing air fares?

Leave your comments below

Page 1 of 1

 
1

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 27/02/2009 13:32:42
Why do they not just increase their fares by a pound?

Idiocy in the making.
2

,

27/02/2009 13:35:09
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 27/02/2009 13:41:30
You don't like it? Don't use thier services.

You don't like paying anything between 20p and 50p for the use of public toilets in a town or city? Don't user thier services.

Complaining about it? Get's you nowhere, literally.
4

scotsmaninengland,

27/02/2009 13:44:33
Spelling mistakes like Dave from Berra gets you nowhere !!
5

scotsmaninengland,

27/02/2009 13:45:01
sorry barra haha
6

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 27/02/2009 13:46:30
i before e except before c and p, eh?
7

scotsmaninengland,

27/02/2009 13:47:52
no i before e EXCEPT after c
8

muppetspotter,

Edinburgh 27/02/2009 13:53:05
#3 which is why after last summer's family holiday I vowed never to use Mr O'Leary and his bunch of crooks (no that is not defamatory as it wouuld be easy to prove in court) again!

and I suspect that there are rather a lot of passengers who, lured by Ryan air's promises of 'cheap' flights are so fleeced by the excess charges levied by airport staff, literally have no money to go to the loo on the plane.

It would be tempting to have a widdle in the aisle!

now there's a thought.....I might just fly one more time.....
9

peteedinburgh,

Edinburgh 27/02/2009 13:53:10
Typical ryanair


Slashes Priced



10

redcliffe62,

27/02/2009 13:59:06
what if one has had a vindaloo the night before, can one buy a multi voucher ticket system for the loo based on volume discount?
11

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 27/02/2009 14:02:44
d'oh! Except "their" which is i after e and not subject to the rules?

8

Quite right too. I too am a sworn enemy of Ryan Air....but sometimes, for cheap n cheerful - Caveat emptor?
12

Finlang,

South China 27/02/2009 14:06:04
A cheapskate airline will expect you to pay for on-top and over-and-above extras. You want it? Good luck. I prefer to fork out the extra (reluctantly natch) for a normal no-surprises flight. On long-hauls I like my meal and drink to arrive without a demand for £5 or worse. Having said that, KLM in Edinburgh and/or in Amsterdam managed to divert my luggage to Tallinn, Estonia, a couple of weeks ago, instead of to Hong Kong. My underwear now knows a country I have never been to as yet. Hey ho ... Situation normal.

13

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 27/02/2009 14:09:31
Finlang

Sadly, it's a cheapskate and profit making airline. One of very few.
14

sam the god,

27/02/2009 15:01:21
does the cost rise depending what you are doing in the toilet and do you get a discount for two people at a time?
15

muppetspotter,

Edinburgh 27/02/2009 15:08:22
What cheeses me off about Ryan air is their tedious mantra that they sell affordable air travel - yes if you don't mind flying at 3.00am with a toothbrush to be dropped off at an airport "creatively" named after a city 60 odd miles away with no public transport links. Fact of the matter is that if you have to move kids, luggage etc flying is expensive and i like to know how much it is going to cost me first. case in matter - family of 3 from Luton to Gerona (oh, sorry I mean Barcelona Girona) last summer, according to Ryan air £30 - by the time I had shelled out for all of the additions including extra bags that - wait for it - gave me the right to split my 15K baggage allowance between more than one bag - and been fleeced for the excess charges from weighing machines that I doubt are ever regularly calibrated by trading standards - the cost ended up £580 - a whole £75 more than BA to Barcelona proper. Now I don't mind paying £500 to move my family across Europe - it is a long way and it is expensive but don't wast my time and cheese me off by trying to convince me you are offering some kinda bargain.

I won't be flying Ryan Air ever again.

If you have never flown with them then be warned - unless you are travelling very light and have no logistic challenges, don't mind being treated like garbage and are willing to cross your legs for 3 hours then I am sure they are wonderful
16

Mad Jock,

East Lothian 27/02/2009 15:24:46
When the passengers are p*ssed on the Ryanair booze, they'll either use the sick bags or just p*ss on the floor. It's free.
17

The Sprucer,

27/02/2009 15:35:53

Looks like I'll be swiping my granpa's p#ss bottle before getting on the plane to Florence next month.
18

shrek4,

27/02/2009 15:40:34
Jobby Tax!
19

Small Bladder,

Sydney, Australia 27/02/2009 15:50:38
What happens if you spend the last of your holiday money on a drink?

They make their money on the drink but loose it on the cleaning...
20

European Scot,

27/02/2009 16:55:09

Presumably for men this will involve a standing charge. ( curries excepted )
Ryanair, not entirely flying for your convenience.
21

mike3,

27/02/2009 17:08:29
Will passengers be frisked for plastic containers?
22

European Scot,

27/02/2009 17:18:27
22 Mike3

" Will passengers be frisked for plastic containers?"

Not if they're already full. ( who'd want to ? )
23

Richard M,

Scottish Raj 27/02/2009 17:28:58
When it's busy and there is a queue, people will just hold the door open when they leave and let the next person in
24

WL,

livingston 27/02/2009 17:52:16
Excellent idea. Will they also install a cash machine for the passengers who do not have pounds, but like to pay in a different currency?
25

,

27/02/2009 17:56:44
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
26

Tartan Viking,

27/02/2009 18:03:42
Which? Holiday magazine condemned the plan, saying Ryanair was "plumbing the depths".

Ha ha - nice one.

Will they be charging for the number of sheets you take to wipe your bum? I suppose there's always the inflight magazine for this purpose!!
27

Tartan Viking,

27/02/2009 18:06:35
Horrah!! The Hootsmon lets me use the word bum without censuring it.

Bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum.

Feel better now
28

Bejjy,

27/02/2009 18:19:14
O'Leary is taking the p*ss.
29

radge dug,

27/02/2009 19:56:43
#26- good news! Ditch the pound now!

Time to go Euro.
30

Tartan Viking,

27/02/2009 20:47:26
#32.

There I sit, broken hearted
Paid a poond, and only farted.
31

Tartan Viking,

27/02/2009 20:49:10
JINGS!!

I'm allowed to say 'farted' without being censured!!

Farted farted farted farted farted...

Feel even better now.
32

DAVIDW1940,

bc canada 27/02/2009 21:43:12
Ryan Air is great. I have flown from Girona to Prestwick several times. The price is good. The punctuality is second to none. The worst carrier is Globespan. Spent extra day in Calgary, and an extra day in Glasgow.
33

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 27/02/2009 21:58:48
Watch out for the cheapskates who use the old bomber pilot trick with a hose and a plastic bottle, or maybe rubber knickers for the daring.

Mr O'Weewee could do with just charging a basic fare which comprises the basics like toilet and a sandwich and cup of tea instead of unbundling cost and ending as expensive as anyone else. Last time my wife flew by Ryanair her suitcase cost more to send than she did! Then there were check-in charges... etc.
34

Jae M,

Edinburgh 27/02/2009 22:58:52
you don´t even get sick bags on all the ryanair flights, how´s that going to work for some people?!
35

DanishBird,

Fife 09/03/2009 13:43:12
On my last recent flight on Ryanair I paid £3(!) for a cup of much needed tea..(same cup of tea would cost £2 on Easyjet). I will never buy a single drink - hot or cold - on Ryanair again if it is gonna cost me a quid to rid myself of it again. I got myself an Electron card so I don't pay 'plastic tax' (Visa debit costs £4.75 per passenger on the same booking!) and I have become an expert on packing (using vacuum bags, wearing that extra warm fleece under my coat, miniature toiletries and carrying my essentials in a bumbag (not counted as hand luggage) How I miss the days of all inclusive flights to an airport not situated in the back of beyond - complete with a free meal and complimentary drinks and newspapers..sigh..

 

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