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Ryanair introduces strict new £500 fine for passengers

A BUDGET airline has introduced strict new fines for passengers.

Ryanair has confirmed that it has implemented a £500 fine for disruptive passengers.

Timisoara, Romania - 06.20.2021: Passengers boarding on a Ryanair plane at Timioara Traian Vuia International Airport
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Ryanair has announced a £500 minimum fine for disruptive passengers[/caption]

Flight attendant serving passengers on a Ryanair flight.
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Any passengers that are removed from the plane, will face a fine[/caption]

From Thursday June 12, passengers whose unruly behaviour results in them being offloaded from the aircraft will be dealt the fine as the company attempts to clampdown on misconduct.

The £500 fine is the minimum you could be charged, with the company saying they will continue to pursue civil damages.

A Ryanair spokesperson said: “It is unacceptable that passengers are made suffer unnecessary disruption because of one unruly passenger’s behaviour.

“To help ensure that our passengers and crew travel in a comfortable and stress-free environment, without unnecessary disruption caused by a tiny number of unruly passengers, we have introduced a £500 fine, which will be issued to any passengers offloaded from aircraft as a result of their misconduct.

“While these are isolated events which happen across all airlines, disruptive behaviour in such a confined shared space is unacceptable, and we hope that our proactive approach will act as a deterrent to eliminate this unacceptable behaviour onboard our aircraft.”

This marks a significant shift to clampdown on disruptive behaviour, weeks after airlines have made headlines for several unruly flights.

Earlier this year Ryanair issued a warning to passengers after they claimed £12,500 in damages against a passenger onboard a 2024 Dublin-Lanzarote flight.

After the passengers behaviour forced the flight to divert to Porto, the airline pursued a financial claim for the cost of overnight accommodation, passenger expenses and landing costs.

It led the company to announce a plan for a “major clampdown” to ensure passengers behave respectfully towards staff, and other flyers.

The budget airline hoped that the legal action would deter future flyers from bad behaviour.


Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary has been vocal about his criticism of passenger behaviour.

He previously called for a limit of two alcoholic drinks per passenger to be introduced at airport bars in response to an increase in disorder on flights.

It claims this would result in “a safer travel experience for passengers and crews”.

Passengers causing disruption during flights can cause aircraft to be diverted, which often costs the airline thousands of pounds.

Offering cheap flights to a range of European destinations, the airline has become popular with partygoers, lending itself to excitable behaviour.

The company said that the increase in antisocial behaviour is industry-wide.

In May 2025, passengers complained that an EasyJet flight had been turned into a “mid-air nightclub” by rowdy passengers.

Advice for flying with Ryanair

  • All Ryanair passengers can bring a small personal bag on board but this must fit under the seat in front of you, but it must be no bigger than 40cm x 20cm x 25cm
  • Any over-sized cabin bags will be refused at the boarding gate and put in the hold for a fee
  • Ryanair also charges passengers up to £55 check-in at the airport
  • Anyone who loses their card at the airport will have to pay a £20 reissue fee
  • Book to sit in the front five rows if you want to head off the plane first
  • Extra legroom seats can be found in rows 1 A, B, C or 2 D, E, F as well as row 16 and 17 near the emergency exit
  • The worst seat on Ryanair’s Boeing 737-800 aircraft is also 11A because of its lack of window.

Video shows that the London to Ibiza flight was filled by shouting, guys hitting each other, and lots of alcohol.

The passengers were standing during the flight and banging on overhead lockers, getting in the way of the flight attendants,

The overwhelming flight left one passenger saying she had a “panic attack.”

Another EasyJet flight faced disruptions in the same month after a passenger grabbed the plane door and yelled “bomb”.

The chaos forced the pilot to make an emergency landing – something that passengers could now face charges for under Ryanair’s new policy.

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