Getting money back from SAS after a flight disruption is genuinely frustrating, especially when you're stuck at the gate with no clear answers. Whether your flight was canceled outright, delayed for hours, or you were bumped from an oversold flight, real compensation options exist. This guide walks through your rights under US DOT rules and EU Regulation 261/2004, what SAS is actually required to cover, and exactly how to file a claim that holds up. No fluff, just the steps that matter.
What Are My Compensation & Reimbursement Rights with SAS
Your rights depend heavily on where your flight departs from, what caused the disruption, and how you respond at the airport. Here is a breakdown of the three main frameworks that apply to SAS passengers.
US DOT Rules (Domestic and US-Departing Flights)
The US Department of Transportation does not require airlines to pay cash compensation for delays on domestic routes. However, if SAS cancels your flight and you choose not to travel, you are entitled to a full refund to your original payment method, not just a travel credit. That right applies regardless of the reason for the cancellation.
For involuntary denied boarding on oversold flights, DOT rules do require compensation. Current tiers (subject to DOT updates) work roughly as follows:
- If the airline gets you to your destination within 1 hour of original arrival: no compensation required.
- Delay of 1 to 2 hours (domestic) or 1 to 4 hours (international): 200% of one-way fare, up to approximately $775.
- Delay beyond 2 hours (domestic) or 4 hours (international): 400% of one-way fare, up to approximately $1,550.
Always verify current thresholds directly with the DOT, as these figures are periodically adjusted.
EU Regulation 261/2004 (EU and UK Departures)
If your SAS flight departs from an airport in the European Union or the United Kingdom, EU261 may entitle you to fixed compensation ranging from EUR 250 to EUR 600, depending on flight distance and the length of your delay on arrival. This applies to cancellations, delays of 3 or more hours, and involuntary denied boarding. Extraordinary circumstances (severe weather, air traffic control strikes, and similar events outside airline control) can exempt the airline from paying fixed compensation, though care-of-duty obligations (meals, accommodation) typically still apply.
SAS Contract of Carriage
SAS publishes its conditions of carriage, which outline what the airline commits to covering for disruptions within its control. This includes reasonable meal vouchers, hotel accommodation for overnight delays, and ground transport in qualifying situations. Review the current SAS conditions directly on the SAS website, as specific terms can change. For comparison, major US carriers publish similar documents: Delta Contract of Carriage, United Contract of Carriage, and American Airlines Conditions of Carriage.
Key point: Compensation is calculated per passenger, not per booking. A family of four each has an individual claim.
What to Do at the Airport Right Now
The next 30 to 60 minutes matter more than most people realize. How you document the disruption and what you agree to at the gate can directly affect whether your claim succeeds later. Do not sign or accept anything until you understand what you are giving up.
- Screenshot everything immediately. Open the SAS app or your email confirmation, capture the disruption notification, your boarding pass, and any gate display showing the delay or cancellation. Timestamps on screenshots are useful evidence.
- Request a written statement of the delay or cancellation reason. Verbal explanations from gate agents are easy to dispute later. Ask for something printed or emailed that states the official cause.
- Ask what SAS will cover and get it confirmed in writing. Meals, hotel, and ground transport may be available depending on the situation. A verbal promise at the gate is not a guarantee.
- Do not accept a voucher without reading the terms first. Some vouchers include language that waives your right to further cash compensation. Confirm what you are agreeing to before signing or clicking accept.
- Keep every receipt. Food, rideshare, hotel, even toiletries if you were stranded overnight. Reasonable out-of-pocket expenses may be reimbursable, but only if you can document them.
- Record the agent's name, the station code, and any case or reference number given to you. This information is critical if your claim is later disputed or if you need to escalate.
How Much Compensation Can I Get from SAS
The amount you can recover depends on your route, the disruption type, and what you can document. Here is a quick reference:
| Scenario | Typical Rule | What You Can Get |
|---|---|---|
| US flight canceled by SAS | DOT refund obligation | Full refund to original payment method if you decline rebooking |
| US involuntary denied boarding | DOT compensation tiers | Up to ~$775 (200% fare) or ~$1,550 (400% fare) depending on delay length |
| EU/UK departure, delay 3+ hours | EU Regulation 261/2004 | EUR 250 to EUR 600 fixed compensation per passenger, subject to route distance and cause |
| Delay-related out-of-pocket expenses | SAS carrier policy | Reimbursement for reasonable meals, accommodation, and transport with receipts |
A few things worth noting:
- Compensation amounts are per passenger. Two travelers on the same booking each have a separate claim.
- Extraordinary circumstances (weather events, security incidents, and similar situations outside airline control) can reduce or eliminate fixed compensation obligations, particularly under EU261.
- Documented evidence, receipts, written disruption notices, and boarding passes, significantly improves claim outcomes.
How Many Hours After a Delay Can I Claim Compensation from SAS
The short answer: the clock starts at your scheduled departure, and different thresholds unlock different options. Here is what each delay window typically means in practice.
What if my SAS flight is delayed by 1 hour
At this stage, no cash compensation is triggered under US DOT rules or EU261. Your main move is to document the delay in writing and monitor whether it extends further. If you are connecting to another flight, alert the gate agent now rather than waiting.
What if delayed by 2 hours
Still below the EU261 threshold for fixed compensation, but SAS may begin offering meal vouchers for longer waits depending on the situation and airport. Under DOT rules, a 2-hour domestic delay does not require cash compensation, but if the airline cancels and you opt out of travel, a full refund remains your right. Keep documenting.
What if delayed by 3 hours
This is the key threshold under EU Regulation 261/2004. If your flight departs from an EU or UK airport and arrives 3 or more hours late, you may be entitled to fixed compensation (EUR 250 to EUR 600) unless the airline can demonstrate extraordinary circumstances. For US domestic routes, no automatic cash compensation applies at this mark, but expense reimbursement for meals and accommodation may be available under SAS policy if the delay is within airline control.
What if delayed by over 4 hours
At 4-plus hours, your options expand. Under EU261, compensation entitlement is firmly established for qualifying routes. For US involuntary denied boarding situations, the higher DOT compensation tier (400% of fare, up to approximately $1,550) may apply. If you have been waiting this long, you also have the right to request a full refund and abandon travel entirely on most routes. Collect every receipt and confirm your options with SAS staff in writing before accepting any alternative arrangement.
Step-by-Step: How to File a Compensation Claim with SAS
Most successful claims are filed within 24 to 72 hours of the disruption, while details are fresh and documentation is organized. SAS, like most carriers, has separate processes for ticket refunds, fixed compensation claims, and expense reimbursements. Using the wrong form wastes time. Work through these steps carefully.
