Holidays: Expert warns Britons could face 'additional costs' on travel abroad from May

Hopeful holidaymakers may have seen a glimpse of light at the end of the tunnel yesterday following the news international holidays may be able to go ahead as soon as May. As part of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s “roadmap” out of lockdown, the Global Travel Taskforce is set to be reinstated on April 12.

“Some countries may remain closed to UK residents, a scenario for which several of the UK’s largest airlines would refuse a refund for.

“Travellers will also be liable for the cost of any testing that may be required, which could easily add up to several hundred pounds for a family.

“But the greatest risk is travelling and finding the country you are in has been added to the red list, meaning hotel quarantine is required on return at a cost of £1,750.”

This is why holidaymakers should remain “cautious” and do their research before they book.

“Our advice remains that anyone considering booking a holiday abroad in the near future should proceed with caution,” the expert continued.

“If you do book, only use providers that offer flexible booking policies, and where appropriate, book a package holiday as these come with stronger consumer protections.”

Secretary of State for Health Matt Hancock has also suggested holidays could be on hold for some time longer.

Speaking on BBC this morning, Mr Hancock said: “We’ve been absolutely clear that this is an area that we need to do further work on.

“We’ve put in the dates that we would like to see this opened up, but they are ‘not before’ dates, so, we are saying it won’t happen before then.

“We have also got this review into international travel which is important.”

Travel will be largely dependent upon the vaccine, and whether or not it is able to combat Covid variants.

“The number of these new variants that might not be dealt with by the vaccine as effectively as the Covid that’s circulating in the large part here in the UK – all those variants, we need to see the impact of the vaccine on them,” the Health Secretary continued.

“If that impact is perfectly good – if that stops the majority of hospitalisations and deaths, as the vaccine does against the variant that’s here, then great.

“But if there’s a variant that can get around the vaccine, then obviously, that would set us back.”

source: express.co.uk