Staycations post-Covid are £300 more per week – cheaper to go abroad

Simon Calder offers advice on booking staycations for 2021

We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you’ve consented to and to improve our understanding of you. This may include adverts from us and 3rd parties based on our understanding. You can unsubscribe at any time. More info

The pandemic has hit Britons’ wallets. Even as the country goes back to a semblance of normal, pre-pandemic prices are hard to find.

It has now been revealed that self-catered accommodation in the UK is costing 40 percent more this summer than in 2019.

The rise in price is the equivalent of £300 more for a week in August.

The study was conducted by Which? with BBC Panorama, using data from AirDNA, which looks at websites such as Airbnb and Vrbo.

In 2019, it cost £109 a night for two people in Brighton.

READ MORE: Venice set to charge Britons up to €10 to visit the city

The price is now £206, or 89 percent more.

Cleaning and sanitation costs are now higher due to the pandemic.

But a woman interviewed by BBC also blamed the platforms.

She said: “If you’re booking by third-party advertising website, they’re putting commissions on the actual end price.”

The claim was refuted by Vrbo.

The platform said it “does not set, change or influence the property prices a host chooses”.

Whatever the reason for the remarkable rise in price, Britons foot the bill.

Staycations are now more expensive than a holiday abroad.

Which? compared a stay in the UK with overseas holidays, and even factoring in flights, it may be worth it to head to the continent.

A week in Brighton was found to be £1,131, while a stay in the south of France with hotel and flights was £1,085.

Even more remarkable, a week in the Lake District was £2,424 while flights and accommodation for a week in Lake Garda, Italy, was £802.

Which? travel editor Rory Boland said: “We’re not talking about £10, we’re not talking about the cost of a meal out. We’re talking hundreds and hundreds of pounds.”

And he did not believe all of it was down to the pandemic.

He added: “When we looked at it, accommodation prices in 2019 were more expensive in the UK than they were abroad.

“So this isn’t a pandemic problem only, the pandemic has made it worse.”

 

Source: Read Full Article