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Ryanair Contact Telephone Number

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Contact The Ryanair Number

You may wish to call the Ryanair telephone number when:

  • You need to amend or cancel a recent booking
  • You wish to check airport facilities
  • You want to check luggage restrictions or additional charges
  • You require a live update on a delayed or rescheduled flight
  • You want to issue a complaint.

Flying With Ryanair

Ryanair is a UK-based budget airline carrier company that provides cheap flights and hotel packages to customers who wish to travel without breaking the bank. Thanks to its low fares, quick aircraft turnaround times and its ‘no frills’ approach to flying, the company has become one of the most popular and profitable airlines in the travel industry.

When flying with Ryanair, customers have a wide choice of around 50 destinations within the UK and Europe, as well as numerous hotels within major European cities for booking that last minute holiday or weekend break. The airline also offers a car hire service, with the option of returning the car at a different location at the customer’s own convenience, and a Transfer & Park service, enabling customers to save time at the airport in association with local bus and coach partners.

The Ryanair credit card is an option that allows customers to earn travel benefits and introductory offers when they sign up, as well as bonus flights, a 0% p.a for 12 months on balance transfers, and exclusive cardholder offers, such as free digital photo prints and discounts off photo gifts. Find out more with the Ryanair contact details provided by Customer Service Guru.

Ryanair Contact Number

Background of Ryanair

Ryanair is an Irish low-cost airline, established in 1984 and employing over 8500 members of staff (including 1200 pilots) as of 2012. During 2004, there was intensified competition within the low-cost budget airline industry from which only Ryanair and its main competitor easyJet emerged intact. Since then, Ryanair has continued to lead the way in providing a flexible, last-minute travel service to UK customers hoping to fly on a budget.

The company has been continuously criticised for several aspects of its business over the years, such as its customer service approach, its extra charges for things like luggage and on-board refreshments, and the quality of its hygiene standards and level of security training. In 2013 however, the company’s CEO announced Ryanair would be focusing on a turnaround of its customer service strategy and the airline continues to fly over 21.4 million people per year.

Ryanair's Yellow Interiors Could Be Under Threat

September 15th 2014

ryanairThe recent changes that Ryanair has been undergoing have included charges being cut, incentives being introduced for families travelling with them and a new website and app being launched. However, the changes could extend to impact on the on-board environment soon.

Ryanair’s CEO, Michael O’Leary, has admitted he was responsible for the decision to put the gaudy yellow colour scheme on board the cabins around a decade ago. He told the Irish Independent that “it was designed to keep everything very bright. If we’re going to focus more and more, as we are, on the customer experience, maybe a little less in your face and the use of more subtle colours and better imaging. I think on the bulkheads we’re looking at something a bit more lively than just the yellow with the blue Ryanair logo. We’re looking at different alternatives such as photos of happy, smiley people, destinations – something a bit more visually interesting than just the traditional old logo.”

A Ryanair spokesman has minimized the imaginings of his boss, by telling the Telegraph Travel team that any future changes to the interiors of Ryanair’s fleet are in the “planning and design” phase and would not be unveiled until at least 2019. this is when the first of Ryanair’s new fleet of Boeing 737 MAX 200’s are expected to be delivered.

When Michael O’Leary made his appearance at the press conference, to announce the deal for nearly 200 of the aircraft, with a price tag of £13.6 billion, it marked his first appearance in public in some time, raising questions if his infamously outspoken and blunt manner is not what Ryanair want attached to their new image.

It is up for debate if images of “happy smiley people” will ever manage to find their way onto Ryanair planes, especially considering Mr O’Leary’s lengthy track record of making eloquent suggestions about the travel company, that somehow, mysteriously, never seem to materialise.

Other claims the CEO has made in the past include standing, that only cost £1 per person, a coin slot being included on the toilet door and ‘fat tax’. The latter come around as a result of what he was quoted as saying “Nobody wants to sit beside a really fat ****** on board. We have been frankly astonished at the number of customers who don’t only want to tax fat people but torture them.”

It has also been a long running claim that Ryanair will be offering flights to America.

Ryanair Passenger Tried To Open Emergency Exit During Take-Off

April 28th, 2014

Ryanair-contactA Ryanair passenger was claimed to be the cause of a delayed flight earlier this month, when they unexpectedly attempted to open the aircraft’s emergency exit just as it was preparing for takeoff.

The details of the individual and the incident are unknown, but it was clear from the reports of passengers, some via their Facebook pages, that the plane had been brought to a standstill just moments before jetting into the air due to a passenger opening the emergency door.

An airline spokesman explained that the passenger had had a panic attack just as the plan was about to take off, and terrifyingly tried to make their escape. The passenger was ‘overpowered’, although it is not clear whether this was by on-board staff, other passengers, or a combination of the two.

The Ryanair flight was then delayed further as baggage checks were carried out as a safety procedure. The rest of the passengers were forced to wait on the tarmac for 45 minutes whilst the emergency door was reset and the panicked passenger offloaded.

The plane eventually landed at its destination, Rome Ciampino, with an eventual delay of 30 minutes.

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