Flight Delay Compensation: How to Claim $200-$700 Under DOT and International Rules
Your flight was delayed or canceled, and the airline offered a meal voucher and an apology. But depending on where you're flying, you may be legally entitled to $200-$700 in cash compensation — no lawyer required.
Most travelers don't know these rights exist, and airlines aren't eager to advertise them. This guide covers the exact rules, eligibility requirements, and claim process for U.S. DOT regulations, EU Regulation 261/2004, and Canada's Air Passenger Protection Regulations (APPR).
U.S. Flight Delay Rules (DOT)
What You're Entitled To
As of 2024, the DOT significantly strengthened passenger rights:
- Cancellations: Airlines must provide automatic cash refunds (not vouchers) within 7 business days for credit cards, 20 days for other payment methods
- Significant delays: Defined as 3+ hours domestic, 6+ hours international — triggers automatic refund rights
- Tarmac delays over 3 hours: Airlines must let you deplane (domestic flights)
- Lost bags: Refund of checked bag fees if luggage isn't delivered within 12 hours (domestic) or 15-30 hours (international)
What the U.S. Doesn't Require
Unlike Europe, the U.S. has no mandatory cash compensation just for delays. However, airlines' own contracts of carriage often promise meals, hotels, and rebooking — and the DOT enforces those promises.
How to Claim
- Request a refund (not voucher) directly from the airline citing DOT's 2024 refund rule
- If refused, file a complaint at https://airconsumerprotection.dot.gov
- DOT complaints trigger mandatory airline responses and can result in enforcement action
EU Regulation 261/2004 (EU261)
This is the gold standard for passenger compensation and applies to:
- Any flight departing from an EU/EEA airport (any airline)
- Any flight arriving in the EU/EEA on an EU-based airline
Compensation Amounts
| Flight Distance | Delay at Arrival | Compensation |
|---|---|---|
| Under 1,500 km | 3+ hours | €250 ($275) |
| 1,500-3,500 km | 3+ hours | €400 ($440) |
| Over 3,500 km | 4+ hours | €600 ($660) |
Eligibility Requirements
- Flight arrived 3+ hours late at final destination
- Delay was within the airline's control (not weather, strikes, or ATC)
- Claim filed within the statute of limitations (varies by country, typically 2-6 years)
How to Claim EU261 Compensation
- Document everything: boarding pass, delay notification, reason given
- Submit a claim directly to the airline's EU261 claims department
- Reference Regulation (EC) No 261/2004 specifically
- If denied, escalate to the relevant National Enforcement Body (NEB) in the departure country
- For flights from the UK: contact the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA)
Airlines That Pay Quickly vs. Fight Claims
Generally cooperative: Lufthansa, KLM, Air France, British Airways Often resist initially: Ryanair, Wizz Air, TAP Portugal (but must pay when escalated to NEB)
Canada's APPR (Air Passenger Protection Regulations)
Applies to all flights to, from, or within Canada on airlines with Canadian operating licenses.
Compensation Amounts (Delays Within Airline Control)
| Delay Duration | Large Carriers | Small Carriers |
|---|---|---|
| 3-6 hours | $400 CAD | $125 CAD |
| 6-9 hours | $700 CAD | $250 CAD |
| 9+ hours | $1,000 CAD | $500 CAD |
Large carriers include: Air Canada, WestJet, Porter, Flair, Sunwing
How to Claim
- File a claim with the airline within 1 year of the flight
- Airline has 30 days to respond
- If denied or unsatisfied, file with the Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA)
- Include: flight confirmation, boarding pass, airline communications, delay duration
What Counts as "Within Airline Control"?
Compensable (airline's fault):
- Mechanical/maintenance issues
- Crew scheduling problems
- Overbooking
- Operational decisions
- IT system failures
Not compensable (extraordinary circumstances):
- Severe weather
- Air traffic control restrictions
- Security threats
- Political instability
- Bird strikes (debated — some courts say compensable)
Step-by-Step Claim Process
- Save all documentation immediately: boarding passes, delay announcements, receipts for expenses
- Note the actual arrival time (wheels down, not gate arrival — EU courts use gate-open time)
- Ask airline staff for the reason in writing if possible
- File directly with the airline within 30 days using their online claims form
- Reference the specific regulation (EU261, APPR, or DOT refund rule)
- Set a 30-day deadline for response
- Escalate if ignored: NEB (EU), CTA (Canada), DOT complaint (US)
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Documented flight number, dates, scheduled vs. actual times
- [ ] Saved boarding pass and booking confirmation
- [ ] Noted the airline's stated reason for delay
- [ ] Determined which regulation applies (DOT, EU261, or APPR)
- [ ] Filed claim directly with the airline
- [ ] Set calendar reminder for 30-day follow-up
- [ ] Prepared to escalate to regulatory body if denied
Bottom Line
Flight delay compensation is money you're already owed — not a favor from the airline. Know which rules apply to your route, document the delay, file a direct claim citing the specific regulation, and escalate to the enforcement body if the airline doesn't pay. Most claims that reach regulators are resolved in the passenger's favor.
Sources
- U.S. DOT Airline Consumer Protection: https://www.transportation.gov/airconsumer
- EU Regulation 261/2004: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32004R0261
- Canada APPR Regulations: https://otc-cta.gc.ca/eng/air-passenger-protection






