Client receives £2900 for allergic reaction in Mexico Holiday Claims Bureau Secure £2000 Compensation for Child Who Suffered Allergic Reaction in Turkey Client receives £2900 for allergic reaction in Mexico Holiday Claims Bureau Secure £2000 Compensation for Child Who Suffered Allergic Reaction in Turkey Client receives £2900 for allergic reaction in Mexico Holiday Claims Bureau Secure £2000 Compensation for Child Who Suffered Allergic Reaction in Turkey
Told food or drink was dairy free, then suffered a reaction?
Dairy allergy claims often start with a simple but serious mistake: someone asks whether food or drink is safe, receives reassurance, then suffers a reaction because milk, butter, cream, whey, casein or another dairy ingredient was present.
Many dairy allergy claims involve situations where somebody did everything they reasonably could to avoid a reaction, only for incorrect allergen information or unsafe preparation practices to let them down.
At Holiday Claims Bureau, we help people pursue compensation where a dairy or milk allergy reaction was caused by incorrect allergen information, hidden dairy ingredients, cross contamination or staff failing to take allergy warnings seriously.
Dairy allergy claims may involve restaurants, cafés, coffee shops, hotels, takeaways, airport lounges, holiday resorts, cruise ships, airlines, buffets or packaged food.
These claims can happen in the UK or abroad, including during package holidays where hotel, restaurant or resort staff failed to manage allergy risks properly.
In many cases, the person affected specifically asked whether the food was safe beforehand and relied on reassurance from staff before ordering.
Dairy allergy symptoms and severe reactions
Dairy allergy reactions can vary from mild symptoms to serious allergic reactions requiring urgent medical treatment.
Symptoms may include:
- Swelling of the lips, tongue, face or throat
- Skin rash, hives or severe itching
- Vomiting, stomach pain or diarrhoea
- Wheezing, coughing or breathing difficulty
- Dizziness, faintness or confusion
- Tightness in the chest or throat
- Pale or clammy skin
- Anaphylaxis, which can be life-threatening
Dairy allergy should not be confused with lactose intolerance. A dairy or milk allergy involves the immune system and can potentially cause a serious reaction, even from small amounts of milk protein.
If symptoms are severe or worsening, seek emergency medical help immediately. A food allergy compensation claim should only be considered once you are safe and have received appropriate medical care.
Start your claim
Hidden dairy, wrong milk and cross contamination
Dairy can appear in obvious foods such as milk, cheese, cream, butter and yoghurt, but it can also be hidden in foods where people may not expect it.
Even trace amounts of milk protein can trigger reactions for some people, which is why accurate allergen handling matters so much.
Dairy allergy claims may involve:
- Food described as dairy free when it was not
- Incorrect allergen information from staff
- Milk being used instead of a dairy-free alternative
- Cross contamination in cafés or coffee shops
- Shared utensils, boards, grills or preparation areas
- Butter, cream, whey, casein or milk powder in food
- Buttermilk marinades or sauces not clearly disclosed
- Buffet food with missing or unclear allergen labels
- Staff confusing dairy allergy with lactose intolerance
- Coffee made with dairy milk instead of oat, soya or another alternative
- Steam wands, jugs or equipment contaminated with milk
- “Non-dairy” products containing milk proteins such as casein or whey
- Packaged food with incorrect or missing allergen information
Many dairy allergy claims involve situations where the allergy was clearly disclosed, but unsafe food or drink was still served.
Where a business fails to take reasonable care after being warned about a dairy allergy, it may be responsible for the harm caused.
What evidence may support a dairy allergy compensation claim?
Evidence can help show what was ordered, what allergy information was given, what food or drink was served, and how the reaction affected you.
Helpful evidence may include:
- Receipts or proof of purchase
- Photos of menus, allergen information, packaging or labels
- Evidence that the dairy allergy was disclosed before ordering
- Medical records, GP notes or hospital paperwork
- Photographs showing visible symptoms or reactions
- Witness details from friends, family, staff or other diners
- Complaint emails, messages or correspondence
- Details of medication, emergency treatment or adrenaline pen use
- Bank statements or booking confirmations where relevant
You do not need to have every piece of evidence before contacting us.
Our specialist allergy claims team can review what you already have, explain what may still be useful, and guide you through the next steps clearly.
Am I eligible to make a dairy allergy compensation claim?
You may be eligible to make a dairy allergy compensation claim if your reaction happened because a restaurant, hotel, café, takeaway, airline, holiday provider or food business failed to take reasonable allergy precautions.
This may include situations involving:
- Incorrect dairy allergen information
- Food or drink being described as dairy free when it was not
- Cross contamination during preparation
- Milk used instead of a dairy-free alternative
- Hidden milk ingredients not disclosed
- Staff ignoring or misunderstanding allergy warnings
- Allergen labels missing, unclear or incorrect
- Unsafe buffet or shared food environments
Businesses that serve food have a responsibility to provide accurate allergen information and take allergy warnings seriously.
A claim is strongest where you can show that your allergy was communicated, the food was represented as safe, or the business failed to provide the allergen information it should have provided.
Dairy allergy or lactose intolerance?
Dairy allergy and lactose intolerance are often confused, but they are not the same.
A dairy allergy usually involves an immune response to milk proteins and can potentially cause serious allergic symptoms, including anaphylaxis.
Lactose intolerance is usually linked to difficulty digesting lactose, the sugar found in milk.
This distinction matters because food providers must understand and respond properly when somebody discloses a dairy or milk allergy. Dismissing a serious allergy as “just intolerance” can put people at risk.
Start Your ClaimHow much compensation could be claimed for a dairy allergy reaction?
The amount of compensation that may be awarded depends on the seriousness of the dairy allergy reaction and the impact it had on your health, work, finances and wider life.
Factors that may affect compensation include:
- The severity of the allergic reaction
- Whether hospital treatment or emergency care was required
- Whether adrenaline medication was used
- How long symptoms lasted
- Any ongoing physical symptoms or complications
- Emotional distress or anxiety caused by the incident
- Lost earnings or time off work
- Medical expenses, travel costs or other financial losses
- Whether the reaction disrupted a holiday, meal, flight or family event
At Holiday Claims Bureau, our specialist allergy solicitors assess each case individually.
We handle dairy allergy claims on a No Win No Fee basis, meaning there is no upfront cost to discuss your case with our team.
Dairy allergy claims in restaurants, hotels and on holiday
Dairy allergy reactions can happen in everyday food settings, but they can be especially stressful during travel or holidays when you may be relying on staff, menus, buffets or hotel restaurants for safe food.
We may be able to help with dairy allergy claims involving:
- Restaurants and cafés
- Takeaways and food delivery orders
- Coffee shops
- Hotels and resorts
- Package holidays abroad
- Airport lounges and travel venues
- Cruise ships
- Airlines and in-flight meals
- Holiday park restaurants
- Buffets and all-inclusive dining
Hotel and holiday dairy allergy claims often involve buffet cross contamination, unclear allergen labelling, language barriers, staff misunderstanding allergy warnings or unsafe preparation practices.
If your dairy allergy reaction happened during a holiday, our team can assess whether the hotel, restaurant, tour operator or food provider may have been responsible.
Why choose Holiday Claims Bureau for your dairy allergy claim?
Dairy allergy claims can be difficult to deal with alone. Restaurants may deny what was said, staff may confuse allergy with intolerance, menus may change, and food businesses may argue that the reaction was not their fault.
Holiday Claims Bureau provides specialist support for allergy compensation claims involving UK venues, hotels, restaurants, takeaways, package holidays and overseas resorts.
Our team can help with:
- Dairy and milk allergy compensation claims
- Claims involving restaurants, cafés, hotels and holiday providers
- Evidence gathering from menus, medical records, witnesses and complaints
- Cases involving children and family holidays
- No Win No Fee representation
- Clear advice on whether your claim may be valid
- Regular updates throughout the claims process
We understand how upsetting and avoidable these incidents can feel, particularly when you took reasonable care to explain your allergy before eating.
Our role is to make the claims process clear, protect your position, and work to recover the maximum compensation you may be entitled to claim.
Latest Allergy Compensation News
Read the latest dairy allergy, milk allergy and food allergy compensation stories, including real cases involving incorrect allergen information, cross contamination, hidden ingredients and allergic reactions in restaurants, hotels and holiday settings.
Frequently Asked Questions
Dairy allergy compensation claims often raise questions around allergen labelling, cross contamination, evidence, compensation and whether a business can be held responsible after giving incorrect allergy information. Our FAQs answer some of the most common questions people ask after suffering a dairy or milk allergy reaction.Yes. You may be able to claim compensation if you suffered a dairy or milk allergy reaction because a restaurant, hotel, café, takeaway, airline or food provider failed to provide accurate allergen information or failed to take reasonable precautions.
Claims may involve hidden milk ingredients, incorrect allergen advice, cross contamination or food being described as dairy free when it was not.
Your health should come first. Seek emergency medical help if symptoms are severe or worsening.
Once you are safe, it may help to keep receipts, take photographs of menus or packaging, keep medical paperwork, record what happened, note who you spoke to, and keep copies of any complaints or messages.
Our team can then advise whether you may have grounds to pursue compensation.
Potentially, yes. Dairy cross contamination can happen where milk, butter, cream, cheese or other dairy ingredients come into contact with food that was meant to be dairy free.
Claims may involve shared preparation areas, utensils, grills, coffee machines, steam wands, buffet serving tools or poor kitchen procedures.
Potentially, yes. Some dairy allergy claims happen after somebody orders a dairy-free alternative but is mistakenly served dairy milk instead.
These claims often involve coffee shops, cafés or restaurants where the wrong milk was used, drinks were prepared with contaminated equipment, or staff failed to follow allergy procedures correctly.
Helpful evidence may include receipts, menus, allergen information, packaging, medical records, photographs of symptoms, witness details, complaint correspondence and proof that the allergy was disclosed.
You do not need to have everything before speaking to us. Our specialist allergy claims team can advise what evidence may help support your claim.
Yes. We handle dairy allergy compensation claims on a No Win No Fee basis.
This means there is no upfront cost to discuss your case with our specialist solicitors, and you will not pay legal fees if the claim is unsuccessful, subject to the terms of the agreement.
Potentially, yes. If staff assured you that food or drink was dairy free, but it later caused a dairy allergy reaction, there may be grounds to pursue compensation.
This can include situations involving incorrect allergen advice, missing ingredient information, cross contamination or staff failing to check properly before serving food.
A dairy allergy usually involves the immune system reacting to milk proteins and can potentially cause serious allergic symptoms.
Lactose intolerance usually involves difficulty digesting lactose, the sugar found in milk.
The difference matters because dairy allergy warnings should be taken seriously by food businesses. Staff confusing allergy with intolerance can create serious risk.
Yes. A parent or legal guardian may be able to bring a compensation claim on behalf of a child who suffered a dairy allergy reaction because of incorrect allergen information, cross contamination or negligent food handling.
These claims can be especially distressing for families, particularly where emergency medical treatment was needed.
Yes. We may be able to help if you suffered a dairy allergy reaction during a package holiday, at a hotel, restaurant, airport, resort or food venue abroad.
Overseas dairy allergy claims often involve unclear allergen information, buffet cross contamination, staff misunderstanding allergy warnings or hotels failing to take allergy risks seriously.
The amount of compensation depends on the seriousness of the reaction and how it affected your life.
Compensation may take into account pain, suffering, medical treatment, emotional distress, lost earnings, travel expenses, disrupted holidays, medication costs and any ongoing impact caused by the reaction.