Premier Inn is still one of the easiest ways to cut the cost of a family break: when an adult buys a Premier Inn Breakfast, up to two under-16s can eat breakfast for free.
This is not a room discount or a voucher code. It is a food offer, so the saving depends on whether you were going to pay for breakfast anyway. But if you are travelling with kids and you like the convenience of eating on site, it can take a noticeable chunk off the bill.
What you get
- Offer: up to two under-16s eat breakfast free when an adult orders a Premier Inn Breakfast
- Where: Premier Inn restaurants (availability varies by hotel)
- Code: none (it is not a voucher)
- Checked on: 22 May 2026
Is it actually good value?
It is, but only in the right scenario. If you normally skip breakfast or prefer a café, it will not change your trip. If you were already planning to pay for hotel breakfast, getting two kids fed for free is one of those simple little wins that makes a weekend away feel less expensive.
How to book
Use the Book Now button below to open Premier Inn’s offers page, then book your stay as normal.
When you are at the hotel, order a Premier Inn Breakfast for an adult and the free kids’ breakfast is applied for up to two under-16s. If you are booking a family stay, it is worth double-checking that the hotel you have chosen serves breakfast on site.


Jane Robinson is Senior Editor at Flight Tribe. She has a Master’s in English and Journalism, and writes about flight deals, holiday offers and practical ways UK travellers can spend less without wasting time on weak promotions. Jane has spent time living and working across Asia and New Zealand, which gave her a lasting interest in how people travel, eat, move around and spend their free time in different places.
At Flight Tribe, her work focuses on verified prices, realistic travel dates, booking terms and whether a deal is actually worth attention.
How Jane works
Jane checks offers against live supplier pages wherever possible, including prices, dates, departure points, baggage rules and booking conditions. She is quietly sceptical of anything that sounds too good to be true, and helps keep Flight Tribe’s travel advice useful, honest and easy to act on.
Editorial standards
Flight Tribe covers deals for readers first. Affiliate links do not decide whether an offer is worth writing about.
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