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Infants DO NOT fly internationally on flights for FREE!

57 replies

Sassyzen · 08/09/2017 17:04

I just wanted to share with 'mums to be', 'pregnant mums', 'new mums'... actually any mums out there, my expensive experience.

I have always been led to believe that babies who travel on your lap, fly for free. NOT TRUE!

I booked flights to Australia back in January 2017, when I was pregnant, with Expedia. I phoned them because I knew I would be traveling in October with my 3 yo daughter and with a 12 week old infant. Back then I didn't know my baby's name or even if he was going to male of female, therefore I couldn't book online without the infant details. I explained this to their travel booking agent over the phone. I got the same quoted price as the online quote for 1 Adult, 1 Child and 1 Infant traveling to Australia. Therefore I booked over the phone because I obviously couldn't add my baby's details back then, and was advised to call back once my had my infant's name and passport details. I presumed all three of us were booked, and that all I was doing was adding my infant's name to the booking once we knew.

Eight months later, I have called to give my infant son's details, only to find that I must pay for a separate infant ticket (apparently required) and that the infant fare is 10% of an adult fare. No one told me this at the time of booking or at any time after when I called both Expedia and the Airline to request an infant bassinet seat on the flight and assistance as I was traveling alone with both of them. Furthermore, it's not 10% of 'my' cheaper flight ticket/fare that I paid back in January, it's 10% of the published adult ticket/fare NOW - at the time of creating my son's booking! Had I known this, I would have called back in July when I registered his name! - it would have been most probably cheaper!

I have since done my research and found that it is only some airlines, short-haul flights and domestic flights - which are free for infants to travel on an adult lap. Long haul flights on many airlines make you pay for an 'infant fare' between 1% - 25% of an adult fare at the time of making the infant fare's booking, most charging 10%. I found my info here on a skyscanner article: www.skyscanner.net/news/flying-babies

Please be aware of this and not be caught out like me! I couldn't even find anything on the Airline's website about charging a 10% infant fare. Expedia, to be fair, have been good and after many exhausting hours on the phone, explaining and debating (in between breast feeding), as a gesture of 'good will' compensated me 50% of the published fare in my circumstance for my baby's ticket... but that is still more expensive than 10% of my ticket/fare that I paid back in January.

It is outrageous that Airlines charge this 10%, as infants are NOT guaranteed a bassinet, do NOT eat or take up a seat, yet are still charged 10%... god knows for what? Oh ...and then there's the tax on top of that, but that's not the Airlines' fault. Although I struggled to find any indication of how much they charge or how much an infant travels for on their websites.

OP posts:
Sassyzen · 08/09/2017 21:06

Thank you MilkshakeAddict, very helpful on the tax.

Thanks everyone, I get the point on the charge. Many points I hadn't thought of ...luggage, weight etc.

'I was led to believe' (and I meant this) through various conversations I've had over the last couple of years with other mums and my own experiences traveling on flights (domestic flights in France and Germany) with my daughter, that babies traveling on an adult lap was free, since the mums had moaned about paying for toddler seats 'unlike their babies on their lap', and I didn't have to pay for my daughter when she was under two, but like Haint says, perhaps I am getting it confused with trains - as we do this a lot more. It is completely me wrong and you've all made that abundantly clear. Thank you.

My post was to really to make those like me, who are not so well traveled with babies, and on a very tight budget aware of the charges. I still should have been made aware that I would need to pay extra later, as my initial online quote 'did include my infant' and then I booked and paid based on that quote. I only wanted to help others. I guess you mums know it all so there is little point sharing anything really.

OP posts:
Copperbeech33 · 08/09/2017 21:09

I have always been led to believe that babies who travel on your lap, fly for free. NOT TRUE!

I haven't read any further than this.

Who lead you to believe anything like that? How gullible are you?

Celticlassie · 08/09/2017 21:19

They usually get normal hold and hand luggage, plus a pram and a car seat...

When I've flown with my DD she gets two pieces of equipment (pram/car seat/travel cot) but no additional hold or hand baggage. Her flight with Ryanair was actually more than mine, as it was £20 and mine was £9.99!

MilkshakeAddict · 08/09/2017 21:30

@Celticlassie I apologise, I was talking about airlines where you don't pay extra for your luggage. Ryanair and presumably the other budget airlines are different as even adults pay on top for hold luggage. Airlines that include hold luggage in the ticket price allow infants hold and hand luggage.

WhatToDoAboutThis2017 · 08/09/2017 21:39

I guess you mums know it all so there is little point sharing anything really.

There's no need to have that attitude.

MarriedinMaui · 08/09/2017 21:43

I think you'll be very unlikely to get "extra assistance". Sorry. I've never heard of that no matter how many small children you are travelling with.

somewhereovertherain · 08/09/2017 21:55

I worked for an airline 25 years ago and you paid then nothing new always as about 10% of the adult fair. No seat till two and the child fair

HeadDreamer · 08/09/2017 22:50

They get full luggage allowance and a car seat and a pushchair.

You can request a child's meal for an infant. Not all infants are pre weaning age. I have travelled with both mine on lap and requested meal every time. They were over 6 months.

They might get a child's pack.

I never thought an infant was free.

NikiBarbie · 08/09/2017 22:59

My post was to really to make those like me, who are not so well traveled with babies, and on a very tight budget aware of the charges.

You're flying to Australia. Most people on a very tight budget can't do that.

Liadain · 08/09/2017 23:03

Ah well, that's a good life lesson for you there isn't it, OP. Don't believe everything you hear.

Still not the fault/problem of the airlines, though.

Gindingaling · 09/09/2017 04:50

You're flying to Australia. Most people on a very tight budget can't do that

Im sure the OP meant 'travelling on a very tight budget'.

Ttbb · 09/09/2017 04:58

Insurance and liability? If the plane goes down the airline will make a payout for the infant too.

Want2bSupermum · 09/09/2017 05:01

Tell me what I don't already know. I fly back to the UK to check on my father every 3 weeks or so. I take the baby for a discount as I only pay 10%. With over 2s it's full price. I live close to NYC. It can get expensive.

Want2bSupermum · 09/09/2017 05:04

To shock people ...... the cost is per seat these days. For us to fly home costs a fortune. Think £800 per seat minimum. Apparently this is a luxury. Doesnt seem that way when it's the only way for DC to see grandparents.

famousfour · 09/09/2017 05:07

I think everyone is being a bit unfair. I have to admit I also vaguely thought that infants on laps were 'free' but now that I think about it I have always paid a nominal fee - I think I just assumed it was tax. I don't usually notice since you buy the tickets in a block. I've added infants to a booking very late and not been hit with a massive bill so it sounds like your experience was unlucky. I had no idea they had baggage allowance other than a pram / car seat. And I fly a fair bit!

famousfour · 09/09/2017 05:07

Basically I should pay more attention!

PonyPals · 09/09/2017 05:10

Currently in Fiji on a holiday booked with Expedia and our 22 month old was not charged anything (and had luggage allowance). They also looked after us and blocked out the middle seat so he didn't have to sit on our laps.

Flew many times with him and never paid anything (from Australia with different airlines).
The rule here is under 2 - free

BoomBoomsCousin · 09/09/2017 06:01

I was also surprised when I found out a fee was charged OP. I was lucky enough that it wasn't a huge hit to our budget and I wasn't caught out adding them to the itinerary at the last minute and getting a big shock. what happened to you could easily have happened to me and I would have appreciated knowing in advance.

OhBondageUpYours · 09/09/2017 06:28

I just paid £49 for return flights for my 7 month old to and from Canary Islands with Easyjet (via Thomas Cook).

No hold suitcase or hand luggage allowed for baby, but I was allowed to put her pushchair and car seat on the plane. No food either as Easyjet.

I suspect that's about 10%, maybe a bit more.

ICJump · 09/09/2017 06:36

I'm we're free but you still pay taxes which works out around 10% of the adult fare.

When I book a seat for my 18 month old the tick was 50% but still pay adult taxes so about 75% of the full adult cost.

OhBondageUpYours · 09/09/2017 06:40

Thinking again about that Easyjet / Thomas Cook £49, that's way more than 10% of one adult fare. I think the adult fare was about £150. So it's 10% of the three adult fares on the booking combined.

somewhereovertherain · 09/09/2017 07:54

It's 10% of the full fare. Not a discounted one you may have booked.

traffordtimes · 09/09/2017 08:06

www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/holidays/article-1700760/Flying-with-your-baby-It-will-cost-you.html
This article about the amounts they all charge is from 2010, so no recent change.
Maybe some of the people you spoke to were thinking of trains or something else OP? To be fair, lots of things do let infants go free, but not planes.

traffordtimes · 09/09/2017 08:15

my initial online quote 'did include my infant' and then I booked and paid based on that quote.
This is the part where you DO have a real issue to complain about OP. If they provided a quote, which mentioned your infant as part of the booking, paid it, and then were told later that you had to pay more for the infant, they surely broke the contract that they made with you when they took your money for the original set of flights?
It depends on the wording for the infant, but it does sound as though that quote was misleading, and you might have a case for making them honour what they offered (maybe ask in a legal section on here?).

Want2bSupermum · 09/09/2017 23:23

When I fly transatlantic with my DC who are over 2 there is no discount. Their seat costs as much as mine. I get very annoyed that they don't carry milk on the plane for their young passengers. After all they carry alcohol for adults.