Refunds & Compensation
Step-by-step guide

Refund Taking Forever? Force the Payment

Airline owes you money but ghosting? Time to escalate.

Refund stuck. Push it through with this:

Person filing a refund claim from a phone in the airport

Refund vs compensation - they're not the same

A refund is the money back for a service you didn't get. Compensation is an extra payment because the airline failed to deliver on time. You can usually claim both at once: refund for the unused leg, plus compensation for the disruption. Airlines hope you'll only ask for one. Always claim both in the same email and quote the regulation.

Do this right now

  1. 1Send a formal demand by email, mention the regulation (EU 261 or DOT rule).
  2. 2Set a 14 day deadline in writing.
  3. 3Save every email, you will need it.

What you're entitled to

EU: refund must be issued within 7 days. Period.
US DOT: 7 business days for credit card refunds, 20 for cash.
Beyond that, you can dispute with your bank.
Busy airport hall - claiming compensation after disruption

Why airlines stall, and how to push past it

Most refunds are processed by an outsourced back office that handles thousands per day. Generic 'we are reviewing your case' replies are autoresponders, not real updates. Reply once a week with the same subject line and a calm tone - that bumps your case in their queue. After 14 days, mention chargeback. After 30, file with the regulator. After 60, small claims is on the table.

Quick fixes that work

1File a chargeback with your credit card. Works often.
2File complaint with national aviation authority (DOT in US, CAA in UK).
3Small claims court for amounts under $5,000.

What to say at the desk

Copy & use

"Per [EU Reg 261/2004 / US DOT 14 CFR 259.5], you are required to refund within 7 days. It has been [X days]. Refund booking [REF] within 14 days or I will file a chargeback and a complaint."

Small things that make a big difference

  • Send the first claim within 7 days - shows you're serious and starts the clock cleanly.
  • Quote the regulation by article number. 'EU 261/2004 Article 7' lands harder than 'EU rules'.
  • Don't accept a voucher 'as a goodwill gesture' if you're entitled to cash - it usually replaces your right.
  • Card chargebacks are quicker than court but you only get one shot - file with full evidence.
  • If the airline ignores you for 30 days, escalate to your country's aviation regulator. It's free.

Paper trail beats good intentions

Save the original booking confirmation, the cancellation/delay notice, every email exchange, and any vouchers, taxis or hotel receipts. Put them all in one folder labelled with your booking reference. When you escalate, attach the lot in one PDF - regulators read claims faster when everything is in one place. Missing receipts is the number one reason claims get reduced.

Need a hand with this?

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