UK’s shifting quarantines see travellers paying hefty fares

Bloomberg

The UK’s fluctuating quarantine restrictions are again leading to punishing airfares for vacationers forced to rush home on short notice.
Travellers scrambling to return from Portugal before a rule requiring self-isolation kicks in on Saturday faced paying more than $640 for a one-way ticket, based on fares from both British Airways Plc and Jet2holidays Ltd.
Airlines have been vocal critics of the UK’s quarantine regime, claiming it stifles demand. But carriers have in turn been criticised for charging high prices to travellers blindsided when a quarantine is imposed with little or no warning.
“At a time when the airlines are going to be hugely reliant on public goodwill, I would question whether it’s the right decision to be making lots
of holidaymakers extremely angry about the prices they’re paying,” said Rory Boland, a travel editor at Which?, a consumer advocacy group.
When the UK added France to its quarantine list in August, 160,000 Britons vacationing in the country faced a chaotic scramble for tickets.
A spokesman for EasyJet Plc said pricing is demand-led and the airline doesn’t artificially increase fares. British Airways said it has reviewed its
schedule and added additional flights from Portugal, while a Jet2 spokesperson didn’t immediately comment. The reason fares rise “is largely the system logic which is triggered at higher capacity,” said John Strickland of airline advisory firm JLS Consulting. “It doesn’t mean the airlines aren’t making a bit more money on a few flights at the last minute, but it’s not some malevolent plan.”
Travellers who arrived in the UK from Portugal after 4 am on Saturday were expected to have to self-isolate for 14 days. Hungary, French Polynesia and Reunion were also added to the list. Sweden was removed, meaning voyagers from the Scandinavian country will no longer have to quarantine when arriving in the UK Fares reflected the change.

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