If you have a family holiday in the EU it will cost £28 for a family of 4 for the travel registration. Now the EHIC card will be gone.. Travel insurance will be around £15... That's £88 more. Most families don't even contribute this much annually towards our current EU contribution.
JJ other places have those issues also, so the EU isn't competing, it's a level field. Flight times and culture will also sway people. Also will loved destinations that people go to annually.
ff my calculations may be wrong.. But in the op have implied that you should do the math.
Exactly Spath - the other places already have those issues - therefore THEIR prices are not going up any further to UK tourists. Their prices will be constant
ONLY the EU prices will go up relative to everyehere else - they will not have the advantage that they presently have - and therefore some people will not go to the EU and will try other places instead. DEMAND for the EU holidays will decrease!
I am talking about a CETERIS PARIBUS situation where the only determinant is PRICE.
//The EHIC is not an alternative to travel insurance. It will not cover any private medical healthcare or costs, such as mountain rescue in ski resorts, being flown back to the UK, or lost or stolen property. It is also not valid on cruises.//
I always buy insurance at about £12 for a one week trip to Majorca (Mallorca) and this year the hotel charged me c.20 euros holiday tax when I arrived. This won't put me off going again and neither would £7 travel registration.
If we're being asked to do the maths (as opposed to math) would folk not be paying for insurance regardless of the destination and the referendum result?
The new ETIAS scheme is due to come in from 2021 and once registered, it is valid for up to three years. In your example then, the additional charge amounts to less than 17p a day for two weeks in Spain.