New easyJet service to hand deliver children’s letters to Santa this Christmas
Airline’s new Lapland postal service launches for young flyers
easyJet’s ‘Letters to Santa’ post boxes will be at airports for children flying this festive season
The airline’s pilots and crew will fly children’s letters on its flights to Rovaniemi in Lapland, the home of Santa Claus
A special letter collection service for schools across the UK is also being introduced
The service has launched to help families travelling around the holidays as new research reveals nearly three quarters (71%) of children flying away on holiday are worried that Santa won’t be able to find them
Findings reveal the lengths parents will go to, to keep magical traditions alive when they are away, including packing carrots, cookies and Scotch for Santa
Most surprising requests found in children’s letters to Santa also revealed including wanting Santa to steal the sprouts from Christmas dinner and a device that translates meows from cats!
easyJet pilots and crew will be flying children’s letters directly to Santa in Lapland this Christmas, as part of a new Europe-wide festive service.
With around 200,000 families set to fly with easyJet during the festive season, the airline is installing special post boxes at its major airports across the UK and Europe this December.
The service has been launched after new research revealed nearly three-quarters (71%) of children flying around the holidays this Christmas are worried that Santa won’t be able to find them.
According to research by the airline of 2,000 British parents and their children, over half (52%) of kids worry Santa won’t find them if they are spending Christmas at relatives or friends, while nine in ten (91%) parents surveyed say their biggest fear is forgetting to pack their children’s Christmas stocking.
From today, young travellers passing through London Gatwick, London Luton, Bristol and Manchester airports will have the opportunity to drop off their letters via easyJet’s unmistakable special orange post boxes in the airport terminal ahead of the big day.
The airline is also providing a special letter collection service to local schools near its UK airports which will see easyJet’s cabin crew bringing their famous warm welcome to collect letters to take directly to Santa.
The letters will be delivered on easyJet flights from across the UK and Europe directly to Rovaniemi in Lapland, the home of Santa Claus. easyJet pilots and cabin crew will then hand deliver them to Santa ensuring a magical way for children to have their wishes arrive safely regardless of where they’ll be this Christmas.
The research also revealed the lengths parents will go to, to ensure a magical Christmas wherever they are spending it. Nine in 10 (93%) parents say they have packed treats for Santa to take on holiday, including carrots, cookies and Scotch.
Half of Brits going away this Christmas (51%) will be visiting friends and family, with most (38%) of respondents saying that somewhere wintery and festive would be their ideal Christmas holiday destination, while a further 18% prefer a hot and sunny escape and 10% love a city break.
Nearly all Brits (98%) travelling abroad will make an effort to find events and festive activities to ensure their children feel the magic of the festive season.
97% will still try to undertake Christmas traditions, with nearly half (48%) visiting a Christmas market and the same figure say they plan on eating a traditional Christmas dinner. Of those surveyed, 89% will make sure they have brought their Advent Calendar with them ahead of the big day.
The festive study also revealed some surprising requests parents have seen in their letters to Santa.
The surprising requests children make in their letters to Santa, according to British parents:
Banning broccoli
A device that translates meows from cats
A pet whale
A lifetime supply of chocolate
Asking for a new planet
Never ending supply of cake
Wanting Father Christmas to steal the sprouts from Christmas dinner
Real ladders and pet snakes to play real-life ‘snakes and ladders’ game
A flying unicorn
No more homework
easyJet Pilot Hannah Wells, who is set to deliver letters from the UK to Lapland later this month said,
“Christmas is a magical time for families and travelling somewhere festive, for some winter sun, or to see friends and family can make it really special. We hope our Letters to Santa postal service will bring some extra magic to the thousands of families travelling with us around the holidays and to schools in our local airport communities, where our fantastic cabin crew will be making sure that even more wishes are hand delivered to Santa in time for Christmas.”
easyJet’s Letters to Santa post boxes can also be found at Paris Charles de Gaulle, Naples, and Milan airports throughout December.
easyJet is set to operate its biggest ever schedule from the UK to Lapland this year, with services to Rovaniemi up to four times a week from Bristol, London Gatwick, London Luton, Edinburgh, Manchester and to Kittila up to two times a week from London Gatwick and Manchester.
- ENDS –
Notes to editors:
Letters to Santa post boxes will be available at airports throughout December
easyJet’s “Letters to Santa” privacy notice can be viewed here: https://mediacentre.easyjet.com/story/16436
About easyJet
easyJet is Europe’s leading airline offering a unique and winning combination of the best route network connecting Europe's primary airports, with great value fares and friendly service.
easyJet flies on more of Europe’s most popular routes than any other airline and carried more than 69 million passengers in 2022 – with 9.5 million travelling for business. The airline has over 300 aircraft on nearly 1000 routes to more than 150 airports across 35 countries. Over 300 million Europeans live within one hour's drive of an easyJet airport.
easyJet aims to be a good corporate citizen, employing people on local contracts in eight countries across Europe in full compliance with national laws and recognising their trade unions. The airline supports several local charities and has a corporate partnership with UNICEF which has raised over £16m for the most vulnerable children since it was established in 2012.
The airline joined the UN-backed Race to Zero in November 2021 and has published its roadmap to net zero carbon emissions by 2050, with a focus on new technology and the ultimate ambition to achieve zero carbon emission flying across its entire fleet, which the airline is working on together with its partners including Airbus, Rolls-Royce, GKN Aerospace, and Cranfield Aerospace Solutions. The roadmap also features a combination of fleet renewal, operational efficiencies, airspace modernisation, Sustainable Aviation Fuel and carbon removal technology. Additionally, it includes an interim carbon emissions intensity reduction target of 35% by 2035 (versus 2019). Since 2000, the airline has already reduced its carbon emissions per passenger, per kilometre by one-third through continued fleet renewal, efficient operations and aiming to fill most of its seats.
Innovation is in easyJet’s DNA – since launching over 25 years ago, easyJet changed the way people fly to the present day where the airline leads the industry in digital, web, engineering and operational innovation.