YOUNG kids on planes are most likely to have a tantrum 27 minutes and 48 seconds into the flight, research claims.
Each one lasts an average 15 minutes, six seconds.
Young kids are most likely to have a tantrum 27 minutes and 48 seconds into the flight, research claimsBut a maths whizz has devised a formula to calm tots long enough to get through a short-haul trip.
Oxford University’s Dr Tom Crawford calculated the time of an expected outburst based on four triggers — sleepiness, boredom, hunger and noise.
Each was scored from zero to ten, with zero meaning the issue is being ignored and ten meaning it is being well managed.
From tongue scraping to saying no, here are 12 health trends to try in 2023Dr Crawford said: “If all four main causes are addressed — meaning they score ten — the average time can be increased to 129 minutes, or five times the average.
“This covers many short-haul flights to Europe that many will be taking in half term.”
He recommends parents make sure their kids nap for 37 minutes, have boredom-busting activities for 31 minutes, are fed for 19 minutes, and have noise blocked out with music or reading for 14 minutes.
The research for Asda also found tantrums leave a third of parents feeling stressed, and a fifth felt embarrassed.
Two-thirds have heightened anxiety at the idea of flying with a misbehaving toddler.
It is so fear-inducing that a quarter would rather go for lunch with their in-laws.