After a disrupted easyJet 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.
When passenger-rights rules may cover a easyJet journey
Use the operating carrier shown for the disrupted flight, the departure and arrival countries, and the final destination on one booking. Do not rely only on the brand that sold the ticket or the airport departure delay.
For easyJet-branded journeys, record the exact operating entity and route. EU and UK coverage can overlap in practical travel patterns, so the departure country, destination and operating carrier should be checked before choosing the legal regime.
Current EU compensation bands
| Flight category | Standard EU amount |
|---|---|
| 1,500 km or less | €250 |
| Intra-EU over 1,500 km, and other flights from 1,500 to 3,500 km | €400 |
| Other flights over 3,500 km | €600 |
These are standard bands, not automatic payments. Final-arrival delay, cancellation notice, rerouting, the operating carrier, route coverage and extraordinary circumstances can change the result. In some rerouting scenarios the amount can be reduced by 50%.
Check Your EligibilityEU261 and UK261 must be separated
| UK261 flight category | Standard amount |
|---|---|
| Under 1,500 km | £220 |
| 1,500 to 3,500 km | £350 |
| Over 3,500 km and arrival 3–4 hours late | £260 |
| Over 3,500 km and arrival more than 4 hours late | £520 |
UK261 coverage depends on the route and operating carrier. A British airline name on the booking does not by itself answer every jurisdiction question, especially where a journey involves multiple carriers or an EU departure.
Identify the easyJet operating company
easyJet-branded flights can be operated by different group airlines. The operating entity, departure country and destination help determine whether EU261, UK261 or another framework is relevant.
Cancellation and self-service rerouting records
Save screenshots of the alternatives shown in the app or account, any request to rebook, and the exact time the cancellation notice arrived. If suitable rerouting was unavailable, keep evidence of the options and prices visible at the time.
Package holidays and separate bookings
Where the flight formed part of a package, package-travel rights may sit alongside passenger-rights rules. Where an onward flight was bought separately, do not assume the carrier is responsible for the separate-ticket loss.
Care, accommodation and reasonable expenses
During a qualifying wait, request meals, refreshments, hotel accommodation and transport where necessary. Where the airline does not provide care, retain itemised receipts and keep spending reasonable. Luxury or unrelated costs are less likely to be reimbursed.
Documents for a easyJet case
- Booking reference and all passenger names
- Flight number and operating carrier
- Scheduled and actual travel times
- Cancellation or delay messages
- Replacement-flight information
- Receipts and the airline’s written explanation
Ask for immediate assistance while still travelling
Meals, refreshments, accommodation, transport and communication support can matter before any compensation decision. Ask easyJet 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.
easyJet case-specific review
For a rights-focused review, separate immediate assistance from any later request for fixed compensation.
Confirm the operating easyJet entity and route
easyJet-branded travel can involve different operating companies. Use the exact operating carrier shown on the booking together with departure and arrival countries. This is especially important when deciding whether EU261, UK261 or another route applies.
Preserve self-service rebooking options
Save screenshots of the alternatives displayed in the app or account, including times and prices. If a suitable replacement was unavailable, the evidence visible at that moment can support why another route or expense was necessary.
Compare cancellation notice with the replacement schedule
Record the timestamp of the first cancellation notice and the departure and arrival times of every offered alternative. The 14-day notice question and the timing of replacement travel are separate parts of the compensation test.
Separate airport changes from final destination
If rerouting uses another airport, keep transport instructions and receipts for reaching the original airport or final destination. The flight replacement and the ground-transfer cost should be documented as distinct issues.
Identify separate-ticket onward travel
A personal itinerary assembled from separate bookings usually does not create the same protected connection as one reservation. Keep the contracts separate and do not present the onward ticket as though easyJet sold the whole journey.
Keep the final response and escalation information
Save the form reference, submitted files and the carrier’s final position. If the answer gives an external cause, ask for the event and timing rather than relying on a broad category.
Build the easyJet rights file
A structured file helps separate immediate assistance, route options and any later compensation question.
- Exact operating easyJet company
- Self-service alternatives shown
- Cancellation notice timestamp
- Airport substitution and transport
- Carrier form and final decision
Name files by date and event, keep originals, and note any information supplied by telephone in a contemporaneous written record. Do not upload identity documents to an unverified form or email address.
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 easyJet 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 easyJet 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 easyJet?
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.
Check Your Eligibility