Money & Budgeting
Flight Delay Compensation UK — How to Claim Up to £520
Your rights to compensation for delayed or cancelled flights from UK airports — how to claim, how much you're owed, and what to do if the airline refuses.
If your flight was delayed by 3 or more hours, cancelled, or you were denied boarding, you may be entitled to fixed compensation of up to £520 per person. Here’s how to claim.
How Much Compensation Are You Owed?
| Flight distance |
Delay required |
Compensation |
| Short-haul (under 1,500km) |
3+ hours |
£220 |
| Medium-haul (1,500–3,500km) |
3+ hours |
£350 |
| Long-haul (over 3,500km) |
3+ hours arrival delay |
£520 |
| Long-haul (over 3,500km) |
3–4 hours arrival delay |
£260 (reduced by 50%) |
The delay is measured at arrival — when the aircraft doors open at your final destination, not when the plane lands or when it was scheduled to depart.
Common Route Examples
| Route |
Distance category |
Compensation |
| London – Edinburgh |
Short-haul |
£220 |
| London – Paris |
Short-haul |
£220 |
| London – Barcelona |
Medium-haul |
£350 |
| London – Tenerife |
Medium-haul |
£350 |
| London – New York |
Long-haul |
£520 |
| London – Dubai |
Long-haul |
£520 |
| Manchester – Antalya |
Medium-haul |
£350 |
| Edinburgh – Amsterdam |
Short-haul |
£220 |
When Can You Claim?
Eligible Flights
| Flight type |
Covered by UK261? |
| Departing from a UK airport (any airline) |
Yes |
| Arriving in the UK on a UK/EU airline |
Yes |
| Arriving in the UK on a non-UK, non-EU airline |
No |
| Connecting flights booked on one ticket, starting from UK |
Yes — compensation based on final destination delay |
| Separate bookings for connecting flights |
Each leg assessed separately |
Eligible Situations
| Situation |
Can you claim? |
| Flight delayed 3+ hours |
Yes |
| Flight cancelled (less than 14 days’ notice) |
Yes |
| Denied boarding (overbooking) |
Yes |
| Missed connection due to first flight delay (one booking) |
Yes — based on final arrival time |
| Flight delayed 2 hours |
No — must be 3+ hours |
| You missed the flight yourself |
No |
| Package holiday flight delayed |
Yes — same rules apply |
| Extraordinary (airline exempt) |
NOT extraordinary (airline must pay) |
| Severe weather (storm, heavy snow, volcanic ash) |
Technical/mechanical fault |
| Air traffic control restrictions |
Crew sickness or shortage |
| Political instability or security threat |
Late arrival of aircraft from previous flight |
| Airport closure |
Fuelling problems |
| Bird strike (debated — often ruled extraordinary) |
IT system failure |
| Strike by ATC staff |
Staff strike by the airline’s own employees |
| Medical emergency (passenger) |
Cleaning or catering delays |
| Lightning strike damage |
Baggage loading problems |
Key court rulings: Technical faults are NOT extraordinary circumstances — airlines are expected to maintain their aircraft (Huzar v Jet2, 2014). Crew sickness is NOT extraordinary unless caused by something genuinely unforeseeable.
How to Claim — Step by Step
| Step |
What to do |
| 1 |
Gather your evidence — booking confirmation, boarding pass, flight number, delay length |
| 2 |
Check the delay length — use FlightStats or FlightAware to confirm actual arrival time |
| 3 |
Write to the airline — use their complaints/claims form on their website |
| 4 |
State your legal right — reference UK261 (or EU261 for EU-departing flights) |
| 5 |
Include flight details — flight number, date, booked time, actual arrival time, booking reference |
| 6 |
Request fixed compensation — state the amount (£220/£350/£520) |
| 7 |
Wait for response — airlines have 8 weeks to respond |
| 8 |
If refused or ignored — escalate (see below) |
What to Include in Your Claim
| Information |
Where to find it |
| Flight number |
Booking confirmation or boarding pass |
| Date of travel |
Booking confirmation |
| Scheduled departure and arrival time |
Booking confirmation |
| Actual arrival time |
FlightStats, FlightAware, or your own records |
| Booking reference |
Confirmation email |
| Passenger names |
All passengers on the booking can claim individually |
| Brief description of the delay |
What happened, how long you waited |
If the Airline Refuses
| Step |
Action |
| 1 |
Reply challenging their decision — especially if they cite “extraordinary circumstances” incorrectly |
| 2 |
Escalate to an ADR scheme (Alternative Dispute Resolution) — free to use |
| 3 |
If no ADR scheme, complain to the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) |
| 4 |
If still unresolved — small claims court (Money Claim Online) |
ADR Schemes for UK Airlines
| Scheme |
Airlines covered |
| CEDR (Centre for Effective Dispute Resolution) |
British Airways, easyJet, Wizz Air, others |
| AviationADR |
Ryanair, Jet2, TUI, others |
| CAA enforcement |
Airlines not in an ADR scheme |
Check which scheme covers your airline at caa.co.uk.
Additional Rights During a Delay
While waiting at the airport, the airline must provide:
| Delay length |
Your entitlement |
| 2+ hours (short-haul) |
Meals and refreshments, 2 phone calls/emails |
| 3+ hours (medium-haul) |
Meals and refreshments, 2 phone calls/emails |
| 4+ hours (long-haul) |
Meals and refreshments, 2 phone calls/emails |
| Overnight delay |
Hotel accommodation and transport to/from hotel |
| 5+ hours |
Full refund if you choose not to travel |
If the airline doesn’t provide these, keep receipts for reasonable expenses (food, drink, hotel) and claim them back separately from the fixed compensation.
Cancelled Flights
| Notice given |
Compensation? |
Alternative flight requirement |
| 14+ days before departure |
No |
None |
| 7–13 days before |
Only if alternative arrives 2+ hours late |
Alternative must depart max 2 hours early, arrive max 4 hours late |
| Under 7 days |
Only if alternative arrives 1+ hour late |
Alternative must depart max 1 hour early, arrive max 2 hours late |
| No notice / on the day |
Yes — full compensation |
Plus right to rebooking or full refund |
Claiming for Past Flights
| Country |
Time limit |
| England |
6 years from date of flight |
| Wales |
6 years |
| Northern Ireland |
6 years |
| Scotland |
5 years |
Should You Use a Claims Company?
| Option |
Cost |
Success rate |
| Claim yourself (free) |
£0 |
High — airlines must pay valid claims |
| Claims company |
25%–40% of compensation (no win, no fee) |
High — but you lose a big chunk |
| Small claims court (if airline refuses) |
£35–£80 court fee |
Very high — airlines usually settle |
Recommendation: Always try claiming directly first — it’s straightforward and free. Only use a claims company if you genuinely don’t have time or the airline is being particularly difficult.
Useful Links