Blimey so both you and your hubby have to pay £50.00 per child, x 4 eeeek
Yep

I understand the per adult part is to not penalise single parent families.
Blimey so both you and your hubby have to pay £50.00 per child, x 4 eeeek
Blimey so both you and your hubby have to pay £50.00 per child, x 4 eeeek
I saved a LOT more than £400 by booking my trip in term time. Okay, I didn't know the full trip was term time. After years of having the October break the same week every year, they now decided to shift it to the end instead of the beginning. But here's the cracker: The holiday dates for this year beyond the end of June were only posted after New Year. Now I ask you .....![]()
If we changed our dates so that we were going 7 days earlier- meaning the kids would only be out 3 or 4 days then the price of our exact same holiday shot up to £10,000 we paid £3400!!! Until the holiday companies are bought to account with these ridiculous school holiday price increases I don't see how anybody could blame us for taking the kids out!
My DD's school authoried 1 day for our florida holiday when she was 4 but it's a private school not sure if that is different.
Good luck OP.
Seems like too much trouble, this having children lark...![]()
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Just you wait.
You think airfares are expensive .... wait for the kids
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Sorry not had chance to read all replies but just wanted to say it doesn't matter.
Your son is in reception class and is below legal compulsory education age.
He does not legally need to be in school until Sept 11 so they can't fine you etc. I know most parents use reception class but it isn't compulsory, he could have quite legally stayed at home with you all year.
Think authorised/unauthorised depends on each school and local authority.
My friend was told one day off for a family wedding was unauthorised in reception - she still took her 4 year old, he was a page boy.
My DD's school authoried 1 day for our florida holiday when she was 4 but it's a private school not sure if that is different.