United Airlines is the third-largest carrier in the US, and their refund process can feel like navigating a maze. Whether your flight was canceled, severely delayed, or you had a bad experience, here's exactly how to get your money back.
When United Owes You a Refund
Under DOT regulations and United's own policies:
- Flight cancellation by United: Full refund to your original payment method — you don't have to accept a travel credit
- Significant schedule change: If your flight time changes by 3+ hours, you're entitled to a refund
- Significant delay: Under new 2025 DOT rules, passengers get automatic refunds for delays of 3+ hours (domestic) or 6+ hours (international)
- Downgrade: If moved to a lower class of service, you're owed the fare difference
- Bag fees for delayed luggage: If your checked bag doesn't arrive within 12 hours (domestic) or 15-30 hours (international), bag fees must be refunded
Step-by-Step: Get Your United Airlines Refund
Step 1: Try the Automated Refund System
For canceled or significantly changed flights:
- Go to united.com/refunds
- Enter your ticket number and last name
- Submit the refund request
- Track status at the same page
This system works well for straightforward cancellations. United must process refunds within 7 business days for credit card purchases and 20 days for cash/check.
Step 2: Contact United Customer Service
For complex situations:
- Phone: 1-800-864-8331
- Twitter/X: @United — often faster than phone
- United app: Use the chat feature
- MileagePlus members: Use your dedicated support number for priority handling
Step 3: File a Formal Complaint
If customer service doesn't resolve it:
- Go to united.com > Contact Us > Customer Care
- Submit a detailed complaint with:
- Confirmation number and flight details
- What happened and what compensation you expect
- Supporting documentation (receipts, photos)
- United typically responds within 7-14 days
Step 4: Escalate Effectively
If the initial response is inadequate:
- Reply and ask for supervisor review: Reference your case number
- CEO correspondence: Write to Scott Kirby, United Airlines, 233 S. Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 60606 — this goes to the executive complaints team
- DOT complaint: File at airconsumer.dot.gov — United must respond to federal complaints
- Social media pressure: Public posts about your experience often get attention from United's social media team
Step 5: Use Credit Card Protections
Many travel credit cards offer:
- Trip delay insurance: Reimburses meals, hotel, and essentials during delays (typically after 6-12 hours)
- Trip cancellation insurance: Covers non-refundable costs when trips are canceled for covered reasons
- Baggage delay/loss insurance: Additional coverage beyond the airline's liability
- Purchase protection: Can dispute charges for services not rendered
How to Maximize Compensation
| What Happened | What to Ask For |
|---|---|
| Cancellation (no rebooking desired) | Full refund to original payment |
| Cancellation (rebooked next day) | Refund + hotel/meal reimbursement |
| 3+ hour delay | Full refund or future travel credit |
| Lost luggage | Up to $3,800 + interim expense reimbursement |
| Involuntary bumping | 200-400% of one-way fare (cash, not vouchers) |
| Poor service experience | Travel voucher ($50-200 typical) |
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Submit refund request at united.com/refunds for cancellations
- [ ] Document everything with photos and receipts
- [ ] Contact United through the most effective channel
- [ ] Request specific compensation (not just "something for my trouble")
- [ ] Reference DOT regulations when applicable
- [ ] Escalate to executive correspondence if needed
- [ ] File a DOT complaint for unresolved issues
- [ ] Check credit card travel protections for additional coverage
Bottom Line
For straightforward cancellations, United's online refund system works. For everything else, be specific about what you want, document everything, and don't accept a travel credit if you're entitled to a cash refund. The DOT complaint process is your strongest tool for getting United to take your issue seriously.
Sources
- United Airlines refund and customer care policies
- U.S. Department of Transportation — passenger rights







