Ryanair Warns of Potential Strike After Banning Online Travel Pirates

Ryanair Warns of Potential Strike After Banning Online Travel Pirates

Ryanair’s Bold Move: Sailing Away from OTA “Pirates”

In a swoop that’s making headlines across the skies, Ryanair has tossed its flights from the big names on the virtual travel front— Booking.com and Kayak. Yep, that’s right. The low‑cost carrier says those sites are “pirates” and they’re glad to see them vacate the runway.

Why Bother? Because the Bottom Line Matters

Sure, these removals might sting in the short run, but the airline is basically saying:

  • Book on ryanair.com and skip the overcharging sneaky tricks.
  • Expect lower fares on their own site just to keep you coming back.
  • Enjoy the peace of mind that comes with no fake contact info or refund scams.

In the meantime, Ryanair is keeping its windows open for the “honest” folks—think Google Flights—who don’t sneak extra fees into your ticket. These green‑horn sites still point you straight to ryanair.com for the final purchase.

What This Means for You, the Fly‑er

All in all, you’ll get the same cheap fares, but with fewer headaches:

  1. No hidden mark‑ups.
  2. No messy contact details.
  3. Direct, uncomplicated booking.

And if you’re a budget‑tuned fan (and we know many of you are), you’ll have no excuse for skipping Rocket‑beam out of the system—just hop straight to the Ryanair portal and keep that wallet happy.

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