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New EU261 ruling on connections means you could be due compensation

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The rules around EU261 / EC261 compensation for delayed, cancelled or downgraded flights continue to evolve as case law sets new precedents on what is and is not included.

The Court of Appeal has now issued a binding judgement – subject to any final appeal by Emirates – on how compensation must be paid if your connecting flight is delayed.

If you have been denied compensation for a flight delay caused by a missed connection at any point in the last six years, you should now be revisiting your claim.  You may be due up to €600.

The Court of Appeal verdict clarifies the position when:

you are flying FROM an EU airport (inbound flights do not count)

and connecting to a second flight at a non-EU airport

The most common scenario here would be someone travelling on Emirates, Etihad or Qatar Airways who is required to change planes in Dubai, Abu Dhabi or Doha.

The CAA summary of the verdict is here.

Here is my summary of the summary.

The case actually involved two separate flights and two different groups of passengers, which the Court of Appeal chose to hear as one case.

Case 1 involved a woman who flew to Bangkok on Emirates.  Her flight from Manchester to Dubai landed 3 hours late.  She missed her connection to Bangkok and eventually arrived 13 hours late.   Emirates offered €300 compensation based on a 3 hour delay, instead of the higher €600 due for a 4+ hour delay.

Case 2 involved a family flying to Sydney on Emirates.  Their flight from Manchester to Dubai landed 2 hours late.  They missed their connection to Sydney and eventually arrived 16 hours late.  Emirates offered no compensation, on the basis that a 2-hour delay does not qualify.

The Court of Appeal decided that Emirates was wrong to refuse to pay €600 compensation even though the second flights were between two countries outside the EU and were operated by a non-EU airline.

Emirates still has an option of appealing so this may not be the end of the matter, although the decision seems clear cut.  For clarity, your flight needs to be on one ticket for compensation to kick in.  You would not be due anything if you missed a connection on a separate ticket.

Because you have six years to claim EU261 compensation, you may now find that you can successfully claim for a delayed connecting flight as long ago as 2011 even if your previous claim was rejected.

What is not clear, interestingly, is whether this judgement applies in reverse.  If your flight from London to Dubai is 3 hours late but you still make your connecting flight, and arrive at your final destination on time (or less than 3 hours late) can the airline now refuse to compensate you for the original delay?  Logically they probably can, although you could then argue that it is unfair to pay people whose trips ended in Dubai compared to those travelling onwards ….

Comments (90)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • TripRep says:

    OT (No Bits)

    Tesco Fuel Saver, anyone know if the 10p off per litre for £60 spend coupons are stackable, ie can you use multiple coupons for a single fill up.

    NB: Alcohol & Gift cards qualify for the £60 spend.

    • the real harry1 says:

      not stackable, and validity is only a couple of weeks

      • TripRep says:

        Still might try it as likely to have 2* £60 spends in Tesco before my next fill up.

    • Rich says:

      Thanks. I hadn’t spotted this clause. Never been a once-only thing when they’ve run fuel discounts in the past I don’t think.

  • Maurice says:

    Would this apply to flights from UK to US with a connection in the US where the inbound flight was delayed and thus connection missed?
    Thanks

  • Joe C says:

    Interesting – I had an LHR-DOH-SIN flight on QR in September 2015 that was delayed 8 hours at DOH because of a plane fault, will certainly try claiming against that now

    • Joe C says:

      Ah, the ruling appears to be for if the first leg of the journey is delayed, not the second leg. Think I may be out of luck

  • AVM says:

    Rob, my family (3 pax) was in the same boat as the family in Case 2, so to speak. Non-EU airline (Aeroflot) claimed delayed departure from Lhr was due to force majeure (it wasn’t).
    I filled out a form on CAA’s website and asked them for assistance, but suspect I will eventually need to go to court. The question is – how do I do that, i.e. how do I notify Aeroflot that I filed a lawsuit against them (do I need to, anyway?)? Aeroflot has a small office in London, but their HQ and Customer Service office is obviously based outside EU. Any advice would be much appreciated!

    • the_real_a says:

      You can send a notice before action at any “reasonable” address, and the London office seems a good choice. I would suggest email customer service at the same time, and if they do not pay up then file a money claim.

      You might also want to consider Boutt and Co who will do it all for you “no win, no fee” – i used them to deal with easyjet who refused to respond to me directly but paid up less a fee when B&C got involved.

  • Patrick says:

    Can I claim on EU261 for this scenario:

    Wife and daughter with AA ticket for MAN-LHR-ORD-DEN. Flight booked using AA points, in business class. Original ticket.
    MAN – LHR on BA plane.
    LHR – ORD on AA plane.
    ORD – DEN on AA plane.

    MAN – LHR flight leaves very late. Missed connection at LHR due to late arrival and lengthy transfer security.

    Re-routed LHR-PHX-DEN.
    LHR-PHX on BA plane.
    PHX-DEN on AA plane.

    Arrived in DEN over 4 hours later than original ticketed arrival time.

  • John says:

    I flew CDG-PHL-LAX-HNL on American in last December. LAX-HNL was delayed by 12 hours due to crew unavailability (on Christmas Eve!)
    American refused to pay EU261 compensation as CDG-PHL was on time. Would that ruling change this? Thank you!

  • Jim says:

    My flight from Glasgow to Heathrow was late by over 2 hours, so missed flight to Larnaca. Arrived there 9 hours late. They also left one suitcase at Heathrow. It arrived 2 days later.
    Am I correct in thinking we get €400 each? For the delay

  • wobbly wings says:

    So just to be clear, all of us who have been delayed many times coming back to LHR due to a missed connection in the US, often on AA, are not due compensation as the carrier causing the delay is not a European carrier. So for example a
    DFW-ORD-LHR with a missed connection in ORD for a late AA flight DFW-ORD are not due compensation even if they arrived at LHR a day later than expected. Whether ORD-LHR is on BA or AA is irrelevant.

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