Wednesday, October 24th 2012 - 05:09 UTC

Airlines must pay compensation to delayed passengers says EU Court of Justice

Airlines must pay compensation to passengers who are delayed by three hours or more, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has ruled. The judgement upholds the court's 2009 ruling, which was challenged by a group of airlines including BA and Easyjet.

Compensation claims will range between 250 and 600 Euros but are not applicable in ‘extraordinary circumstances”

See link inside the article!

Passengers will be able to claim compensation of between 250 Euros and 600 euros, depending on the flight distance. Compensation will not be due in “extraordinary circumstances”.

The court did not specify what those might be, other than saying those circumstances that were beyond the control of the airline.

European regulations introduced in 2004 oblige airlines to pay compensation to passengers for certain cancellations and delays.

A further ruling by the ECJ in 2009 confirmed that delayed passengers should be treated as if their flights had been cancelled, if the delay was longer than three hours.

Prior to this, passengers had only been able to claim for meals, refreshments, two free telephone calls and, for an overnight delay, hotel accommodation and transfers to and from the hotel.

However, some airlines refused to obey this judgement and an appeal by a group of airlines and travel organisations - BA, Easy Jet, TUI Travel and the International Air Transport Association - persuaded the English High Court to refer the matter back to the ECJ in August 2010. 

Raymond Veldkamp, the owner of Flight Delayed which helps consumers seek compensation from airlines: said “We do not expect the ruling would make it any easier for passengers to get money from the airlines when their flights are delayed.

”Most of the time, passengers get fobbed off with vouchers for a free meal or a refreshment. While in reality they are legally entitled to a much higher compensation.”

See: www.flight-delayed.co.uk

 

2 comments Feed

Note: Comments do not reflect MercoPress’ opinions. They are the personal view of our users. We wish to keep this as open and unregulated as possible. However, rude or foul language, discriminative comments (based on ethnicity, religion, gender, nationality, sexual orientation or the sort), spamming or any other offensive or inappropriate behaviour will not be tolerated. Please report any inadequate posts to the editor. Comments must be in English. Thank you.

1 BAMF Paraguay (#) Oct 24th, 2012 - 02:27 pm Report abuse
Awesome, government is always the solution. Airlines could really care less, they will just have to raise the price of their flights. You get what you pay for.
2 British_Kirchnerist (#) Nov 01st, 2012 - 01:31 pm Report abuse
A good ruling =)

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