Holidaymakers rush to book summer getaways in Greece, Spain and Turkey

A SAGE professor has warned Britons not to go on a foreign trip until 2023 despite holidaymakers rushing to book summer getaways ahead of the return of international travel from May 17. 

Some of Britain’s biggest airlines and travel firms revealed a surge in holiday bookings to destinations including Greece, Spain and Turkey in the hours after Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled the roadmap out of lockdown yesterday.  

Britons were quick to act on the news, with easyJet revealing a 337 per cent surge in flight bookings and a 630 per cent jump in holiday bookings for destinations such as Alicante, Malaga, Palmo, Faro and Crete after 3pm yesterday. 

Of the rising bookings, most are for August, followed by July and then September. 

Jet2 saw a 600% increase in summer holiday bookings after the announcement, with bookings surging for destinations across the board including mainland Spain and its islands, Portugal, Greece, Cyprus and Turkey.   

Tui reported its best day for bookings in over a month, with Britons particularly interested in holidays in Greece, Spain and Turkey for the summer and Thomas Cook said it saw a 100 per cent surge on website traffic after the announcement.   

However, Professor Graham Medley, who sits on SAGE and is the UK’s chief pandemic modeller, said today he wouldn’t book a holiday until 2023.

He said: ‘I’m not, I didn’t last year and I won’t next year probably either. I think it’s a time of caution and we have to see. While we’re doing very well with the vaccine in this country, other countries are not doing so well.’

Asked to clarify he would not even book a foreign holiday for 2022, he added: ‘Not at the moment. I wouldn’t book anything. I think the whole situation’s going to be uncertain for a long time. We’ve got more optimism and certainty now in this country than we have for most other places.’

Pictured is a beach in Magaluf, Spain. The surge in holiday bookings included places such as Greece, Spain and Turkey

The roadmap revealing the return of international travel triggered mixed reactions from the travel industry. 

Simon Dolan, Chairman of Jota Aviation & Founder of the Keep Britain Free Movement slammed the plan. 

He said: ‘For almost a year the travel and aviation sector has been forced to adapt to a series of impossible measures. 

‘Border closures, testing, quarantines and travel bans have brought the industry to its knees. 

‘We simply cannot wait until May 17th for travel to open again and there’s no saying Boris won’t push this date back even further. 

‘At this point, the public is so accustomed to Government U-turns that they won’t be rushing to book a holiday anytime soon, and companies will suffer as a result.’

He also warned against vaccine passports and described them as another barrier to the recovery of the industry. 

He said: ‘Even when the day comes, it will be blighted by the introduction of vaccine passports. These will simply act as another barrier to getting the sector back on its feet and are completely discriminatory against those who are unable to, or choose not to get the vaccine for personal reasons. 

‘After all we’ve been through this past year, do we really want to start ostracising people for their choices and creating new marginalised groups? 

‘It is critical we start looking at a way to reopen travel sooner. Otherwise our world-leading industry simply won’t survive and struggling small and medium enterprise will just disappear.’ 

Thomas Cook’s chief executive Alan French, however, dubbed the PM’s roadmap ‘good news’ with the travel company seeing booking ‘flooding in’ already for countries like Greece, Cyprus, Mexico and the Dominican Republic.

Travel firms revealed a surge in holiday bookings in the hours after Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled the roadmap out of lockdown

Travel firms revealed a surge in holiday bookings in the hours after Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled the roadmap out of lockdown

Tui reported that it had its best day for bookings in over a month, with Britons particularly interested in holidays in Greece, Spain and Turkey for the summer

Tui reported that it had its best day for bookings in over a month, with Britons particularly interested in holidays in Greece, Spain and Turkey for the summer

Mr French said: ‘The government’s announcement today is good news for those of us desperate to get away on holiday.

‘While we await more details, it’s clear that the government’s ambition is to open up international travel in the coming months and hopefully in time for the summer holidays.’  

EasyJet’s chief executive Johan Lundgren told the BBC: ‘We have consistently seen that there is pent up demand for travel and this surge in bookings shows that this signal from the Government that it plans to reopen travel has been what UK consumers have been waiting for.’

Amanda Matthews, managing director and owner of luxury travel agency network Designer Travel, said her firm saw double the usual number of enquiries on Monday.

She added: ‘If we were to believe that May would enable us to reopen, then I believe we’d have a really strong summer, but the uncertainty and the lack of information about dates, potential quarantine measures and the cost of testing needed to get back into the UK that makes doing our job an impossible task,’ she said.

The road map to recovery: The PM's plan sees pubs shut until at least April 12 after Easter

The road map to recovery: The PM’s plan sees pubs shut until at least April 12 after Easter

‘We’ve got people who are due to pay balances for holidays at the end of May, and we have to hope that the news is positive, as opposed to people getting nervous and cancelling.’ 

Britons desperate to get away have been rushing to arrange staycation plans following the PM’s announcement yesterday.

Figures released by Avvio, which provides technology to more than 500 hotels around the world, revealed the demand for hotels in August has already risen by a whopping 239 per cent and July by 166 per cent.

The data, which was released yesterday, also showed the revenue for June is up by 63 per cent.

As holidaymakers rush to make bookings, Avvio’s Chief Commercial Officer, Michael De Jongh, said the company had seen a surge in holidaymakers booking hotels in the UK, with the average price being spent for a seven-day stay hitting £1,743.

He said: ‘We’ve all had a tough year and people are desperate to get away this summer.

‘Many consumers feel it’s too risky to book a foreign holiday, so they’re using the money they would have spent going abroad to treat themselves to an incredible stay at a 4 or 5-Star hotel in the UK instead.

‘It may well be the first time many of them have stayed in such a high-end hotel.

‘Of course none of us can be 100 per cent sure what the situation will be like by the summer, but so long as consumers make sure they can amend or cancel their booking easily, they won’t be left financially worse off if lockdown continues longer than anticipated.’

Among the most popular hotel sites being snapped up by Britons so far are the Grand Eastbourne in East Sussex, Rudding Park Hotel in Yorkshire, Crieff Hydro Hotel in Scotland and Lough Erne Resort in Northern Ireland.

The figures by the property site also showed that staycation bookings were also booming across all types of hotels and self-catering accommodation, with August hotel and self-catering bookings up 91 per cent ahead of last year.

Visit Cornwall tourist board has also revealed that bookings for summer by February are up by 50 to 100 per cent compared to last year, The Telegraph reports.