Hands-down the most frustrating thing about flying with RyanAir as an American is having to go to bag drop to get your boarding pass stamped.
Even if you're not checking anything, non-EU citizens have to get a "visa check," which means waiting in the long line for bag drop to have an airline employee behind the desk check your passport.
You also can't get a mobile boarding pass if you're not an EU citizen, which means you have to remember to print out a paper boarding pass before you head to the airport.
If you forget to do that, you could end up paying €15 ($22.67) at the airport to have them reissue it.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAnd you could end up waiting in another line. At the airport in Barcelona, I was given this slip of paper and told to take it to another window to have my boarding pass printed.
The ticket sales window took my money and reprinted my boarding pass.
The flights themselves aren't too terrible, but they're not great. For example, just about every time I flew with RyanAir, passengers had to walk out onto the Tarmac to board the plane via a set of exterior stairs.
Once I got on the plane, the first thing that jumped out at me was the awful color scheme.
The navy and yellow combination is really jarring.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe space for legroom seemed comparable to other airlines, even non-budget ones.
I had plenty of space, but a taller person might not (I'm 5-foot-7).
The bigger problem was the lack of seat-back pockets. Some RyanAir planes have them, but most flights I was on did not. This makes it difficult to find a place to put your things while you're getting settled.
Because of the lack of seat-back pockets, the safety information for the flight is posted on the back of each seat.
The food on the plane leaves a lot to be desired. The basics are there, but there's not much else. This menu also pokes fun at RyanAir's infamous stunt claiming that they'd start charging people to use the bathroom.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAll in all, I found that RyanAir's flights were consistently cheaper than other budget airlines, which made it worth it for me to keep flying. As one former airline employee I met during my travels told me, the planes generally arrive on time and in one piece — which is about all you can ask for considering how much you're paying.