Search Smart Spending:

Airline appears serious about pay toilets

Posted Jun 08 2009, 10:25 AM by Karen Datko
Rating:

Travelers on European budget carrier Ryanair will likely have to start paying for bathroom use, and may wish they had a wooden (think hollow) leg.

Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary told the Guardian newspaper in England that he's serious about charging for toilet access -- an idea he had earlier bandied about -- and also plans to reduce the number of bathrooms on his Boeing 737-800 jets from three to one.

Those bathrooms will be replaced with six more seats -- "which means more passengers will stand in line longer for the privilege of paying to potty. This can't be good for beverage cart sales," wrote Rob Manker at ChicagoTribune.com.

O'Leary said he's asked Boeing to look into placing credit card readers on bathroom locks in new Ryanair planes and making that seat adjustment. The price to potty would be £1, or about $1.60, when it takes effect within two years.

"We are flying aircraft on an average flight time of one hour around Europe," O'Leary said. "What the hell do we need three toilets for?"

Hmm. Perhaps because the 737-800 seats 162 to 189 passengers, depending on the seat configuration, not including O'Leary's extra seats.

Carl Unger at Smarter Travel commented, "To be fair, I can see his point. Ryanair essentially acts as a bus service in the sky .... Of course, your average 737 carries three times as many passengers as your average long-distance bus."

Seeing may be believing when it comes to O'Leary, who the Guardian says is known as "O'Really" because he doesn't always mean what he says. However, it's true that O'Leary has never met an airline fee he didn't like.

In fact, ChicagoTribune.com says, "There are reports O'Leary is also tossing around the idea of requiring passengers to load their own luggage onto jets, so that the airline can cut costs by not having baggage handlers."

Stateside travelers aren't immune from rising fees. Starting Wednesday, June 10, United Airlines customers who don't pay their checked-baggage fees online will start paying an extra $5 at the airport, ChicagoTribune.com says. That will amount to $20 for the first bag and $30 for the second. US Airways will follow suit in July.

Related reading:

Airline might charge for bathroom use

US Airways returns to free drinks for all

Is airline policy for obese passengers fair?

Comments

 

Years ago, pay toilets were common at bus stations.  I figure, if Greyhound can do it, why not Ryanair?  (Although the last time I saw a pay toilet was in the 1980's, at a Greyhound bus station.)  Anymore, airlines, especially the low-fare carriers, can get away with charging fees for anything-even taking nature's call.

I'm sure i'm not the only one who would simply drop a deuce on the floor in front of the door. I've seen it done, I've done it before. You lock people out of the bathroom, you wind up with a  pile of crap.

I guess this means that the planes will be immune from being held on the tarmac for hours or delayed in flight due to airport runway congestion.  

Never mind you can just do your business in the empty beverage containers for number 1s and the air sick bag for number 2s.

If there is a line of people waiting at the toilet, they can just hold the door open for the next person to avoid paying the fee.

I guess when I'm paying £10 to travel to Italy they need to make the money somehow.

At least for US flights would they not be in violation of OSHA guidelines for the number of toilets for a given number of people?

Id just let fly (no pun intended) on the floor. if they want to charge for the bathrooms, i expect it will stink to high heaven in that aluminum tube shortly.

"Id just let fly (no pun intended) on the floor." You nasty pig! Couldn't mommy bring you up any better than that?

The airlines can charge for using the toilets but until they start charge for the barf bags, I know where I will be going.

At some point, the airlines should simply charge the correct fares instead of nickle and diming the passengers.  Why would any business want to make their customers angry all the time.  At some point, people would rather stay home or drive.  I know that when a trip is less than 750 miles one way, I drive because it only takes a few hours more to drive than fly.

What's next? I know. An extra $50.00 if the plane makes it safely to its destination. Air France would clean up.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):