The tightwads at Ryanair have found yet another fee to foist upon customers already nickeled and dimed to death.

The airline widely renowned for being the cheapest thing going says it will start charging passengers £5 ($7.50) for the privilege of printing their boarding passes at home. It's the latest brilliant idea from the folks who earlier this year suggested charging passengers to use lavatories. What makes this idea so absurd is it replaces Ryanair's previous practice of offering free online ticketing as an alternative to checking in at the ticket counter - which costs you £10. Leave it to Ryanair to sell the new fee as a way to save money.

“For some passengers, yes, the price has gone up," spokesman Stephen McNamara told the Times of London. said. “But for those used to paying the £10 airport check-in fee, the price has actually gone down.”

Unless you can't print out your boarding card. Or you lose it. Then you're looking at a £40 fee.

The airline says anyone who doesn't have a printer should get a friend to print the pass for them or go to an Internet cafe in order to avoid a £40 fee.

“Online check-in is the future,” McNamara said, according to the Times. “My mother doesn’t have a computer, but would a person without an ATM card have been allowed to hold up the automation of the banking system?”

Ryanair's move comes as the European Union forces the airline to be more honest in disclosing some of the fees and taxes it slaps on every ticket. Many of them are impossible to avoid, but Ryanair doesn't make that clear when advertising its super-cheap fares. The Independent notes Ryanair will tack a £10 fee onto its "free" tickets if they're purchased with normal credit or debit cards, but it doesn't disclose that charge in the initial price. Combine that with other stealth fees and your free Ryanair flight can end up costing as much as £80 ($120). Not so bad for a round trip ticket, but not great considering that once you get on board your Ryanair flight you'll be charged for everything but the air you breathe - and we're sure the airline is looking for a way to do that, too.

It's not just Ryanair that's doing everything it can to make a buck with extra fees. The Chicago Tribune reports both United and US Airways plan to increase checked bag fees this summer.

Photo: Flickr / Scoobyfoo

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