
Have holiday prices really surged by a quarter?
But there are limits – and I think they may have been reached with the survey this week from the holiday price-comparison website TravelSupermarket. The headline: 'Family Holiday Price Surge for Summer 2025'.
The accompanying press release said data showed ' significant price increases for family holidays in 2025 ' and that costs to some destinations have risen 'by more than a quarter' compared with last year.
The key rises for 'all-inclusive seven-night family breaks for August' are:
UAE: 26 per cent
Egypt: 20 per cent
Turkey: 15 per cent
Greece: 12 per cent
Spain: 9 per cent.
With inflation at barely 3 per cent, those are concerning figures. The data is doubtless reliable. But what exactly do the numbers tell us? Context is important. As the firm makes clear: 'The data is based on TravelSupermarket package holiday clicks between 18 April and 17 June in both 2024 and 2025.' That's clicks, not what people paid.
Now, rational behaviour cannot be assumed of someone seriously contemplating an August visit to the UAE or Egypt: the average high in Dubai is 41C, and the Red Sea resorts are only a couple of degrees cooler. That is 'unfit for human habitation' territory. However, presumably those sunseekers took one look at the prices and decided to search elsewhere, such as Tunisia, the all-inclusive budget destination for summer 2025 (average high 33C).
What puzzles me is: why are the rates in Greece and Turkey up so sharply (12 and 15 per cent respectively)? For the last few weeks, I have been looking at deals from the big holiday companies. The strong sense I get is that prices are falling.
Right now, I am looking at a package holiday from Bournemouth to Icmeler in Turkey, departing Friday, 18 July, with Tui, for an astonishing £195. And another from Gatwick to Corfu on Sunday, 20 July, for £190. That includes round-trip flights clocking up thousands of miles; checked baggage, transfers, and a self-catering apartment.
For a family of four to be able to buy a proper package holiday in Greece or Turkey in late July for under £800 indicates what the companies call a "soft" market. Insist on all-inclusive? That will be £328 per person from Birmingham to Crete on Tuesday, 15 July.
Anecdotally, some travellers are deterred from visiting Turkey, Cyprus and some Greek islands because of the proximity to the tragic conflict in the Middle East. I will happily be visiting Turkey in a couple of weeks. But I am not yet buying my ticket in the hope that prices will fall further.
Back to that survey. Chris Webber, head of deals at TravelSupermarket, says: "We've seen price rises of between 4 per cent and 26 per cent across popular destinations like Spain, Greece, Turkey, the UAE and Portugal.' Seen, but not necessarily sold.
I prefer data about what people buy – and this week Jet2 Holidays revealed a 5 per cent year-on-year increase in package prices, from £830 to £873, 'as supplier-led cost increases were passed through to customers'.
My conclusion: talk of a 'holiday price surge' is misplaced – but possibly only premature. Meanwhile, make the most of those bargain holidays next week if you possibly can.
Simon Calder, also known as The Man Who Pays His Way, has been writing about travel for The Independent since 1994. In his weekly opinion column, he explores a key travel issue – and what it means for you
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21 minutes ago
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BBC News
44 minutes ago
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Telegraph
an hour ago
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If the prices weren't bad enough, the ongoing trend for hidden fees (usually known as 'resort fees') shows no sign of abating. Hotels in the Big Apple now routinely charge a 'destination fee,' which can easily add an extra $30 – per night – to your bill. In the spiritual home of the resort fee, Las Vegas, the average levy has hit $40 per night, up from $36 just one year ago. Stronger dollar We know that Britons are more likely to flock to the US when the exchange rate is in their favour. Shopping addicts may remember the craze for Florida trips just before the financial crash, when one pound bought just over two dollars. These days, things have moved strongly in the other direction, with sterling finding a new home at around $1.30 for much of the past few years. While your British accent and manners might go far in America, your wallet probably won't.