ya but Andrew is saying when he books his child, it is on the same reservation. That is a difference from being on the same flight...I often bring my 7 year old son over to England to see football matches, i have booked flights for me and him, both as adults at least 10 times and never had a problem whatsover, its the same price for an adult as a child .
As the other poster says,i only think the child/adult thing comes into play is if the child is travelling unaccompanied .
Wont be a problem at all once you are travelling with him
But in your case, your child is 15, so they are allowed to travel unaccompanied as long as they have the required valid photo-id. It appears what they are trying to say here in so many words, is that any person aged 14 or 15 is to be booked on the flight as an adult. If they travel alone, then the parent or guardian remains in the airport until the flight takes off. In your case you will be doing that, so it appears you can book them as an adult.From their [broken link removed]:
The 'on the same reservation' bit I would take to mean simply that the accompanying adults must be taking exactly the same flights — which is the case.
- Children under the age of 14 years must always be accompanied on the same reservation by a passenger over 16 years.
- Unaccompanied minors aged 14 or 15 years travelling must present the required valid photo-id at check-in. The parent or guardian of the unaccompanied minors, are required to remain in the airport until the flight has departed.
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