Club 18-30 party may be over as millennials' tastes change

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Foam party on Club 18-30 holidayImage source, Club 18-30

It's been the stuff of tabloid dreams - the exploits of holidaymakers and the reps on Club 18-30 holidays.

From a low-key start in the 1960s, it became notorious, embracing that image with risqué advertising slogans.

Now, Thomas Cook, which took over the brand in 1998, says it is considering its future, including a possible sale.

It wants to concentrate on its Cook's Club brand, which it launched last month and which it believes is of more appeal to its millennial customers.

The concept is centred on its own-brand hotels, which can accommodate 300-400 guests and features such attractions as poolside DJs and a sharper focus on food for, a spokesman told the BBC, the "Instagram generation".

Club 18-30 was founded in the 1960s to offer package holidays targeted at young singles and couples to travel without families or children.

Image source, Getty Images

The first destination was Lloret de Mar on the Costa Brava. In 1973, it was bought out by the management, the first of a series of changes of ownership.

Its controversial, playful image kept it in the public eye throughout the 1990s and 2000s.

Advertising slogans from the time included "It's not all sex, sex, sex. There's a bit of sun and sea as well".

An 18-30 veteran reminisces...

Young, impressionable and on my first package holiday I chose a last-minute 18-30 with friends to Corfu. We'd worked all summer to pay for the trip and a week in the sun with plenty of fun sounded ideal. The reps were all focused on making sure you had "fun"'. That meant lots of bars, clubs, free drinks and games.

I was terrified. But somehow managed to maintain the participation level to end up in the final of a game where the girls had to move an egg up the inside of a bloke's trousers and then down the other side.

Only one of the eggs was hard boiled. We lost, and I never took another 18-30.

"While Club 18-30 is easily the most-recognised brand in this sector, it is a tired and tarnished brand - people who went on its first holidays in the 1970s are now in their 70s!," said Simon Calder, travel editor at the Independent.

"'Hosting the wildest party holidays' (one of its marketing slogans) from Magaluf to Bulgaria is no longer especially popular with local authorities, who are cracking down on organised bar crawls.

"Thomas Cook is moving steadily upmarket, ditching cheap and nasty accommodation in favour of sophisticated all-inclusive properties."

In 2002, ITV made the programme Club Reps, based on the life of the workers. Full of salacious details, it is said to have boosted bookings significantly.

In 2005, Channel 5 showed a documentary called the Curse of Club 18-30. The company was not amused and complained to Ofcom.

Although it is called Club 18-30, the actual target age range is 17-35.