LoveHolidays to refund £18m for cancelled holidays

LoveHolidays has agreed to refund over £18m to 44,000 customers who had holidays cancelled over coronavirus. It follows action by the Competition and Markets Authority, which received hundreds of complaints.

The regulator said that LoveHolidays had told customers asking for a refund on flights that they would only receive it when the firm received money back from the airlines.

LoveHolidays has now committed to refund £18m for cancelled holidays in full by March 2021.

The CMA (Competition and Markets Authority) said it would allow the company that time in order for it to manage its financial position.

But it warned LoveHolidays: "If the firm fails to repay customers by these dates, the CMA is prepared to take the company to court."

In order for customers to receive their money back as quickly as possible, refunds will be made in two parts, for example:

Refunds for the cost of hotel accommodation and transfers:

  • by 31 December 2020: customers will receive refunds for holidays cancelled before 1 November 2020

  • cancellations from 1 January 2021: customers will receive refunds within 14 days of the holiday being cancelled

Refunds for the cost of flights:

  • by 28 February 2021: customers will receive refunds for holidays cancelled before 24 August 2020

  • by 31 March 2021: customers will receive refunds for holidays cancelled between 24 August and 31 October 2020

Further details of the relevant payment dates can be found on the CMA’s package travel webpage.

So far, £7m has been refunded to 20,000 of the 44,000 customers identified by the CMA.

Apologies

LoveHolidays to refund £18m for cancelled holidays to 44,000 customers who had holidays cancelled over coronavirus. LoveHoldays told the BBC it had been "working tirelessly since March to do everything we can to ensure our customers receive their money".

It said it had refunded more than £205m owed to more than 180,000 customers, which, it added, was the equivalent of 10 years' worth of refunds in eight months. It apologised it had taken much longer than normal to process refunds.

Under the Package Travel Regulations, online travel agents are legally bound to refund customers for package holidays cancelled due to coronavirus, regardless of whether or not the agent has received money back from suppliers, for example airlines.

Summer holidays - or lack of them - feel like a lifetime ago for most people. But for those still waiting for a refund, the financial pinch will undoubtedly be felt at this expensive time of year. They will be frustrated that LoveHolidays has been given nearly four more months to pay up in full. The rules state they should have been refunded within 14 days. They are suffering from the tension within the industry, with under-pressure package holiday firms having to pay refunds, but they - in turn - have been waiting for money back from the airlines for cancelled flights.

The summer break proved to be more of a summer breakdown for everyone involved. Andrea Coscelli, chief executive of the CMA, said: "Travel agents have a legal responsibility to make prompt refunds to customers whose holidays have been cancelled due to coronavirus. "We are continuing to investigate package travel firms and where we find evidence that businesses are breaching consumer law, we will not hesitate to take enforcement action to protect consumers."

It marks the latest action taken by the CMA against holiday firms over failed refunds for trips cancelled due to the coronavirus crisis.

The CMA has already secured refund commitments from Lastminute.com, Virgin Holidays, Tui's UK business, Sykes Cottages and Vacation Rentals.

It has also written to more than 100 package holiday firms to remind them of the consumer protection laws.

This follows on the announcement earlier this year that LoveHolidays had resigned from ABTA.  Read the details HERE

Like/Follow us on Facebook

Have Your Say

Like
Like
Happy
Love
Angry
Wow
Sad
0
0
0
0
0
0
Comments (0)
No Internet Connection