Explained: What To Do When Your Flight Is Delayed—Refunds, Rebooking & Compensation Guide

Delayed flight? Know the immediate moves (keep receipts, ask for care), what airlines must legally provide in the EU, US and India, how to claim refunds or compensation, what counts as ‘extraordinary circumstances,’ and when to escalate to regulators
Airline passengers waiting at an airport departure gate after a flight delay, checking flight status boards and seeking information about rebooking and compensation rights.
Stranded at the airport? Here’s what to do when your flight is delayed — from free meals and hotel stays to refunds and rebooking rightsShutterstock
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5 min read

Planes running late is travel’s most universal annoyance — and also one of the most avoidable sources of loss if you know the right moves. Below is a practical, jurisdiction-aware guide that explains what airlines must do, what you should do right away, how compensation and refunds work, and when to take your case to a regulator or insurer.

First Minutes: Act Fast, Document Everything

The moment you learn of a delay, get confirmation in writing (SMS, email or a screenshot of the airline app). Note the original and updated departure/arrival times, the reason the airline gives, and any promises staff make. Keep all receipts for food, taxis, or hotels — you may need them to claim reimbursement. Ask the gate agent or airline staff explicitly what care they will provide (meals, phone calls, accommodation) and when — and write down the person’s name. These small steps make the difference between a denied claim and a quick refund.

What Airlines Must Provide—By Region

European Union: under EC 261/2004 passengers are entitled to care (meals, refreshments and accommodation when overnight) and to cash compensation — typically EUR 250–600 — if you arrive at your destination more than three hours late and the delay is the airline’s responsibility. Care kicks in earlier (basic assistance after two hours) and rerouting or refunds are also options. Note: the EU was negotiating changes to thresholds and amounts in 2025, so expect evolving rules — always check the latest enforcement guidance for exact thresholds.

United States: The Department of Transportation (DOT) rules require airlines to provide status updates and, during tarmac delays, to offer food and water within two hours and keep lavatories operable. For lengthy delays or cancellations, the DOT has required airlines to issue refunds when delays are “significant” and has recently moved to strengthen automatic refunds and clearer refund timelines. New proposals have also suggested minimum cash payments for stranded passengers, though rulemaking timelines and details can change.

India: The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has pushed airlines to proactively inform passengers of their rights (Passenger Charter) via SMS/WhatsApp and tickets; it has also been updating guidance on facilities to be provided during delays and cancellations. India’s regulator enforces requirements around refunds, re-routing and passenger information — but carrier policies can vary, so read the airline’s terms and the DGCA charter for specifics.

Travellers seated in an airport terminal during a flight delay, using phones to check airline compensation rules and available assistance like meals or hotels.
Your flight’s delayed? Stay calm and claim smart — know your airline rights, refunds, and perks before you board againPEXELS

Immediate Passenger Checklist (What To Demand Politely But Firmly)

  1. Ask for refreshment vouchers or meals (usually provided after 2 hours in many regimes).

  2. If the airline offers rebooking on the next flight, get the offer in writing — decide whether to accept or ask for a refund instead. If the delay means an overnight stay, ask whether the carrier will arrange and pay for a hotel.

  3. If you’re in transit and a missed connection means you’ll arrive very late, ask about rerouting options and whether the airline will cover alternate transport.

  4. Keep all documentation: boarding pass, booking confirmation, messages, and receipts. These are the backbone of any compensation claim.

When You’re Entitled To A Cash Payout Or Refund

Compensation often depends on three things: the length of the delay at arrival, the flight distance, and whether the cause was within the airline’s control. In the EU, fixed amounts apply (and can be reduced if rerouting shortens the delay outcome). In other countries, remedies usually include a full refund for unused tickets or rebooking at no extra cost. Airlines generally must refund within a stated timeframe; recent US and international guidance has been moving toward automatic refunds for significant delays. If the airline claims an “extraordinary circumstance” (severe weather, air traffic control strikes, certain security events), compensation may be denied but the airline may still owe care (food, hotel) depending on the regulator.

Filing A Claim And Escalating

  1. File with the airline first: use their online form, attach receipts and a concise timeline.

  2. If rejected or ignored, escalate to the national enforcement body: in the EU that’s the National Enforcement Body for EC261; in the U.S. the DOT’s Aviation Consumer Protection; in India, the DGCA (Passenger Charter). Regulation websites explain their complaint portals and response timelines. Keep copies of every communication.

Practical Tips That Save Money and Stress

— Buy refundable tickets or add trip-protection if your schedule is rigid.
— Use a credit card that covers delays and emergency expenses. Many cards reimburse meals and hotels for long delays.
— If your flight is likely to disrupt an onward non-refundable booking (hotel, tour), keep proof; courts and regulators sometimes grant consequential losses if airlines betrayed contract expectations.
— Consider automated claim services (they take a fee) only when the airline stonewalls. Filing yourself is often free and effective.

When To Call Your Insurer or Lawyer

If your losses are large (missed destination liabilities, expensive non-refundable bookings) and the airline refuses reasonable compensation, contact your travel insurer about coverage for missed connections and trip interruption. Legal action is a last resort. Most claims settle after regulator intervention or small-claims filings in local courts.

Passenger protections have strengthened in many places since the pandemic — and regulators in the EU, US and India have signaled further changes and enforcement drives. Before you fly, bookmark the passenger-rights page of the airline and the regulator for the country you depart from or fly to — a five-minute check can turn a long delay from an annoyance into an insured disruption.

FAQs

Q1. What should I do immediately when my flight is delayed?
As soon as you get a delay notification, save the message or screenshot it, ask airline staff for written confirmation, and keep receipts for food or transport. These will help in claiming compensation or reimbursement later.

Q2. When am I eligible for flight delay compensation?
Eligibility depends on delay duration, distance, and reason. In the EU (EC 261/2004), you can claim up to €600 if your flight arrives over three hours late and it’s the airline’s fault. In India and the US, airlines must refund or rebook if delays are “significant.”

Q3. Does the airline have to give me a hotel for an overnight delay?
Yes — in most regions, if your delay requires an overnight stay, the airline must arrange free hotel accommodation, meals, and airport transfers. Always ask the airline to confirm this in writing before booking your own stay.

Q4. How can I claim compensation or a refund for a delayed flight?
File directly through the airline’s official website or customer care form. Attach proof of delay and receipts. If ignored or denied, escalate to your national regulator—the DGCA in India, DOT in the US, or National Enforcement Body in the EU.

Q5. What counts as “extraordinary circumstances” where airlines don’t pay?
Events outside airline control—such as severe weather, air traffic control strikes, political unrest, or security risks—don’t qualify for compensation. However, airlines must still provide basic care, including food, water, and accommodation where needed.

Airline passengers waiting at an airport departure gate after a flight delay, checking flight status boards and seeking information about rebooking and compensation rights.
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