London Gatwick-Geneva, half term. EasyJet’s morning flight out on 15 February, late afternoon back 22 February: £1,157 return. And no, that does not include any luggage bigger than a small bag that will fit under the seat in front of you.
I asked in a post on X (formerly Twitter): “Is this profiteering? Should the government limit how much airlines can charge during school holidays?” I added that I did not think airfares should be capped.
Tony Thorne immediately came back with a fundamental question: “I have never understood why flights should cost more at holiday times?”
A good point: the prices of most of the things we buy remain unchanged in the short term. It’s the same seat on the same plane with the same crew flying the same route, so why should the price vary?
Because (most) airlines are businesses that aim to make money for their shareholders. Through aviation history they have often been pretty useless at that basic task of turning a profit. For decades, one reason they did badly was because fares were fixed. They were astronomical, and beyond the reach of normal people.
The rich, and those working for well-heeled companies or the government, could fly. With the price constant, the variable was the number of passengers on board: at lunchtime on a wet Wednesday in November, the plane could be empty; on a Friday night or a Saturday in summer, it would sell out well ahead of departure.
“Dynamic pricing”, which easyJet and other budget airlines have always practised, fills those empty seats – and gives people who are desperate to travel on a specific flight the opportunity to buy shortly before departure. They might not like the price, but no one is forcing them to take that flight.
There are many ways to reach the French and Swiss Alps over February half-term: a flight to Basel rather than Geneva, and then a long train ride could save hundreds of pounds. Lots of families drive, though I do not recommend that because of the extra risk involved.
Yet many people deplored the fare that easyJet is charging; presumably they would be even less impressed with the first flight out from Heathrow to Geneva on 15 February on British Airways and the 2.40pm return a week later, currently £2,367 – though that is a business-class ticket (the only kind available) and includes a huge luggage allowance.
“I would like to see all computer-driven dynamic pricing stopped as it’s gaming systems against the consumer,” says Andrew Hesselden. Diane Jones insists: “Should be a cap on holiday flights at times like this.”
Tom recommends: “Flights should have a fixed price, updated twice per year based on the distance, the cost to the airline and the number of seats remaining.”
I am not sure that I could find an airline boss confident of running a profitable operation on that basis. Also, we are not talking here about basic food or medicine; a flight to Switzerland at the height of the ski season is a luxury purchase. I hope everyone on board those precious flights has the time of their life and regards it as money well spent.
During the final three months of 2024 – always the toughest time for budget airlines – easyJet lost just under £3 for each passenger.
Over the last full financial year, Britain’s biggest budget airline made under £7 for each customer flown. That strikes me as a reasonable figure for providing safe air travel. But if you’d like to fill those last few seats to Geneva, I am sure the new chief executive, Kenton Jarvis, will be delighted.
Source: independent.co.uk