After a disrupted How to journey, compensation is only one possible remedy. Rerouting, reimbursement, meals, accommodation and communication support may also matter at different stages.
Use the full booking and final destination to check route coverage, notice, arrival impact, cause and evidence before drawing a conclusion.
Current position: the existing EU261 framework remains the rule used for present-day eligibility checks. Standard EU compensation bands remain €250, €400 and €600, subject to route, final-arrival impact, exclusions and possible reductions after rerouting.
Upcoming EU reform: revised rules were finally approved in July 2026, but they do not apply immediately. They enter into force 12 months and 20 days after publication in the Official Journal. Until that effective date is known and reached, this site treats the existing rules as current law.
Confirm the rights question before submitting
Enter the complete route, operating carrier, booking structure, disruption type, notice and final-arrival impact. This avoids sending a cancellation case through a delay-only analysis or ignoring a missed connection on the same reservation.
Prepare the evidence package
- Booking confirmation and passenger names
- Flight number, date and full itinerary
- Boarding pass or check-in evidence
- Airline messages and stated reason
- Actual arrival information
- Receipts for reasonable expenses
Separate the requests
Fixed compensation, ticket reimbursement, rerouting and expense reimbursement are different requests. Airlines may use separate forms. State clearly what is being claimed and attach the evidence relevant to that remedy.
Submit to the operating carrier first
The operating airline is normally the starting point for an EU261 or UK261 claim, even where the ticket was purchased through an agent or carried another airline’s code. Keep a copy of the submitted form, attachments and confirmation number.
Escalate a rejected or unanswered claim appropriately
Read the rejection reason rather than sending the same text again. Depending on the country and airline, an approved alternative-dispute-resolution body, national enforcement body, court or specialist service may be the next route. Different bodies have different powers and deadlines.
What happens after specialist handoff
An approved partner may verify the flight, request documents, assess jurisdiction and contact the airline. The partner’s fee model and acceptance criteria must be reviewed before submission. A request for more information does not guarantee acceptance or payment.
Ask for immediate assistance while still travelling
Meals, refreshments, accommodation, transport and communication support can matter before any compensation decision. Ask How to what is being provided and keep a record. Where necessary assistance is refused, retain reasonable itemised receipts and explain why the expense was required.
Protect the choice between rerouting and reimbursement
After cancellation, or in defined long-delay circumstances, the passenger may face a choice about continuing the journey. Record every alternative offered before selecting an option. A hurried self-cancellation can make later facts harder to prove, while accepting rerouting does not automatically answer every compensation question.
Follow the journey to the final destination
On one reservation, a missed connection can turn a modest first delay into a substantial final-arrival disruption. Keep the entire itinerary and replacement route. Separate tickets should be identified honestly because the onward journey may not have the same protection.
Keep compensation separate from practical travel rights
Fixed payment is assessed later and can be excluded by a valid extraordinary-circumstances defence. Care, refund and rerouting can still remain relevant. Do not abandon an urgent travel solution while waiting for an answer about compensation.
Request explanations in writing
Ask for the precise reason, notice time and final decision. Airport announcements and staff comments can be useful, but the carrier’s written position creates a clearer record for ADR, enforcement or court review. Preserve changing explanations rather than keeping only the last message.
Escalate only after identifying the unresolved right
State whether the dispute concerns care, rerouting, refund, expenses or fixed compensation. Different public bodies and dispute services may have different powers. Check the correct country and deadline rather than sending the same complaint to several organisations without a plan.
Practical scenarios
The following examples show why passenger rights must be separated into compensation, care, rerouting and reimbursement. They are illustrations, not automatic results.
The airline form accepts only one remedy
If the form is for fixed compensation, keep expense reimbursement and ticket-refund requests clearly identified rather than combining unrelated sums without explanation. Save a copy of every form and attachment.
The airline rejects the case as weather-related
Ask for the precise event, timing and impact. Compare that explanation with airport and journey evidence, then decide whether escalation is justified rather than resubmitting the same generic complaint.
A connection was missed on one booking
Submit the complete itinerary and final-arrival impact. A form that asks only about the first segment may not capture the real disruption at the booked destination.
Build a reliable evidence timeline
Create one chronology from booking to final arrival. Record the original schedule, when the first change was communicated, each revised departure estimate, boarding or offloading events, replacement travel and the time the journey actually ended. A clear timeline is more useful than a folder of unexplained screenshots.
Booking and operating-carrier evidence
Keep the e-ticket, booking reference, passenger names and every segment. Where a codeshare is involved, identify the airline that operated the aircraft. For a connection, show whether all segments were issued on one reservation or were purchased separately.
Disruption and notice evidence
Save messages from How to, airport notifications and app screenshots with visible dates and times. For cancellation, the notice timestamp can be decisive. For delay, the final-arrival record is usually more important than the first departure estimate.
Cause and response evidence
Record the exact reason given, who gave it and when. Ask what alternative aircraft, crew, route or transport was considered. If the explanation later changes, preserve both versions rather than replacing the older screenshot.
Expenses and assistance
Request care from the carrier before buying replacement services where reasonably possible. Keep itemised receipts, explain why each expense was necessary and avoid unrelated or luxury spending. A card statement alone may not show what was purchased.
Final-destination proof
For a through journey, record the actual arrival at the destination shown on the booking. Replacement boarding passes, baggage records, hotel receipts and timestamped messages can help reconstruct a missed connection and later arrival.
Compare the available remedies
Passenger rights are broader than a fixed payment. The most useful remedy during the disruption may be immediate care or alternative travel rather than a later compensation request.
| Remedy | What it addresses | Evidence to keep |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed compensation | Qualifying delay, cancellation or denied boarding under the applicable regime | Route, distance, final arrival, notice and cause |
| Rerouting | Travel to the final destination at the earliest opportunity or, where applicable, at a later chosen date | Options offered, replacement itinerary and communications |
| Ticket reimbursement | Unused travel or an abandoned journey in defined circumstances | Ticket price, unused segments and refund request |
| Care and expenses | Meals, accommodation, communication and necessary ground transport during the wait | Requests for assistance and itemised reasonable receipts |
One event can create more than one remedy, but each has its own conditions. State which remedy is requested and why instead of presenting one unexplained total.
Questions to put to How to
Written answers make the later assessment clearer. Keep the request focused and ask for facts rather than a generic promise of payment.
- What was the precise operational cause of the disruption?
- Which airline operated the affected segment?
- What rerouting options were available and when?
- What meals, accommodation or transport were offered?
- What was the recorded final-arrival time?
- Which claim or reimbursement form should be used for each remedy?
- Can the carrier provide its written decision and supporting reason?
- Which ADR or escalation route is named in the final response?
Passenger-rights checklist
Work through every point before relying on a headline amount or sending documents. Missing one item does not always end a case, but it can change the evidence needed and the appropriate route.
- Confirm the complete route and final destination on the booking.
- Identify the operating carrier for the disrupted segment.
- Record scheduled and actual departure and final-arrival times.
- Save the notice time and the exact reason communicated by How to.
- Separate fixed compensation from refund, rerouting and expenses.
- Keep boarding, check-in, replacement-flight and receipt evidence.
- Check whether the journey is covered by EU261, UK261 or another regime.
- Verify the applicable national time limit before relying on an older case.
Using departure delay instead of final arrival
The legal threshold can depend on arrival at the final booked destination, particularly where a protected connection is missed. Record the whole journey rather than one airport-board time.
Treating every remedy as the same claim
Compensation, ticket reimbursement, rerouting and reasonable expenses answer different questions. Identify each request and attach the evidence that supports it.
Accepting a vague disruption reason
A phrase such as “operational reasons” does not explain whether an event was internal, external or avoidable. Ask How to for the specific cause and retain the response.
Sending original documents without keeping copies
Store copies of forms, attachments, receipts and confirmation numbers. Where a secure external service is later used, review its terms and fee model before submitting personal documents.
Focusing only on compensation
Immediate care, rerouting and reimbursement can be more urgent than a later fixed-sum claim. Ask for assistance during the disruption and keep receipts when it is not provided.
What to do next
Ask How to for care or rerouting while the disruption is happening, then preserve the evidence needed for any later request. Submit compensation, reimbursement and expenses as distinct remedies where the carrier process separates them.
If the airline rejects the request, compare the explanation with the route, timings and cause. Depending on the jurisdiction, the next option may be ADR, a national enforcement body, a court or an approved specialist service. Check the powers and deadlines of that route before proceeding.
Does every three-hour delay qualify?
No. The three-hour arrival threshold is important under current EU rules, but route coverage, operating carrier, cause and evidence must also be assessed.
Can care be owed when compensation is not?
Yes. Meals, accommodation, rerouting or reimbursement can remain relevant even when extraordinary circumstances remove fixed compensation.
Should I claim from the travel agent?
The operating carrier is normally the first target for EU261 or UK261 disruption compensation, although an agent may remain relevant for ticket or package-travel issues.
What should I keep before contacting How to?
Keep the booking, boarding or check-in evidence, airline messages, actual arrival details, replacement-flight information and itemised receipts.
General information only: this guide is not legal advice and cannot determine an individual claim. The operating carrier, an enforcement body, a court or an approved specialist may reach a different conclusion after reviewing the full itinerary and evidence.
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