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Do I have to accept vouchers for flight delay compensation? Know what you should do.

By 01 February 2020 No Comments


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Do I have to accept vouchers for flight delay compensation? Know what to do

by Craig Goodspeed


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The airline is offering vouchers for flight delays? You can choose to accept them, but you’re not obliged to do so. In fact, according to EU Air Passenger Rights, your compensation must be paid in money or travel voucher and/or other services.

Article 7.3 of the EU Regulation 261/2004 clearly states that:

“The compensation shall be paid in cash, by electronic bank transfer, bank orders or bank cheques or, with the signed agreement of the passenger, in travel vouchers and/or other services.”

Know more about EU Regulation 261/2004 

The airline often offers vouchers, instead of money, as flight delay or cancellation compensation. However, if you prefer to be compensated in cash it is easy: just refuse their offer. The airline cannot deny cash payment.


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Flight delay compensation: voucher or cash?

Vouchers are usually offered with up to 50% bonus over the due flight compensation. They can be used to book future flights in the same airline. 

For example, if you are entitled to 600€ the airline might offer you a voucher of 800 or 900€.

Providing such a vouchers as compensation for your delayed or cancelled flight is a good deal for the airline and may seem attractive to you, the passenger. However you might not take full profit from it, or even none at all, because of the vouchers conditions. 

 

You must read carefully the voucher’s rules and consider:

– how long is the voucher valid;
– how many airlines accept it; 
– if you can use it partially several times until exhausted;
– if you can use it for other people or even sell it;
– your travelling plans during the vouchers validity.

If you prefer cash you will receive less, however you will not have any of these constraints. 

The voucher might not be a good thing because will force you to make your plans in a way that accommodates it, limiting your options like destinations and dates. It should be ok if you fly frequently an airline’s route.

My advice is that you think twice before saying yes to the airline’s voucher proposal. 

Flight delay: here’s a quick guide

Flight cancellation: here’s a quick guide


Voucher offered by the airline as flight delay compensation

Reasons why you might not want to accept a voucher as flight compensation

Now let me give you 3 main reasons why you should not accept vouchers offered by airlines for delayed, cancelled or overbooked flights/denied boarding:

Reason 1: Vouchers can only be used with the same airline

When accepting a voucher as flight compensation for the problem you had with your flight, be aware that this voucher can only be used on a trip operated by the same airline. At most, the voucher may be used on an airline of the same group as the airline.


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Reason 2: Vouchers have a time limit to be cashed

Vouchers have a very short time limit to be used. They usually have 1 or 2 years to be discounted as compensation for your cancelled or delayed flight

Eventually, they expire! Well, if you are not planning on traveling in the months ahead, you could be left empty-handed: no new flight and no compensation for your inconvenience.

Reason 3: Vouchers can only be used to book a new trip

Money allows you to book a new trip at any time, with the desired airline, on the day you want, or you can just keep it or spend it any other way you like. 

Vouchers offered by the airlines do not give you such freedom of choice. and so many options. 

Bottom line: Getting cash compensation for your flight gives you greater flexibility than vouchers. However the amount might be less.

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Meal Vouchers: what are they?

Maybe you were looking for information about another type of voucher: meal vouchers

If you are at the airport waiting for your flight that is more than 2 hours late, or waiting for a new flight because yours has been cancelled, or a nearby volcano decided to expel some lava, someone made a security threat, or whatever the reason (provided the fault is not yours) the airline has an obligation to take care of you. In fact, your Air Passenger Rights  includes this: “Right to Care”.

If in such cases the airline does not offer you a meal voucher, you are free to choose a restaurant and order a meal within a reasonable cost.

If you have a voucher but it is not enough for a meal, don’t be shy, just order until you are satisfied.

Keep all the receipts!

You MUST keep all your receipts, so that you can later claim a refund along with financial compensation for your flight, if due.

Bear in mind that in some circumstances the airline can refuse this care duty. For example: if providing the passengers with a meal voucher will further delay the boarding.

All this can become tricky.

I recommend a specialized company. At no cost Aireclaim can check if you are eligible to “care” expenses (besides meals, also hotel and taxi are included, just see my other posts) or receive financial compensation for your delayed or cancelled flight.

Find out now.


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Craig Goodspeed

Craig has a big interest and deep knowledge in the Air Passenger’s Rights. He is a frequent traveller and loves to share guides, tutorials and tips to help people make the most of travel.


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AIR PASSENGERS RIGHTS eu

Air Passengers Rights

According to European regulation CE 261/2004 and other rulings, an air passenger has 3 cumulative rights:

care

rerouting or refund

compensation

They are cumulative and free. The first is automatic, the 2nd is to be settled, the last must be requested.

Airlines are heavily fined if they fail these obligations.

-The care obligation applies after you wait 2 to 4 hours to depart (depends on the flight distance and other details), when you miss a connecting flight in the same booking, your boarding is denied, your ongoing flight is diverted or your canceled flight is rerouted. Terminates with ticket refund or reschedule or upon your final arrival to your destination or, in same cases, back home.
It consists of: food, taxi/bus, hotel and includes reasonable expenses like gilletes, underwear, urgent medicamenta, battery charger, phone calls, etc. If (only if) the airline does not provide this, you can act on your own, keeping all receipts for future refund by the airline.

-The rerouting / refund  Right is due upon some types of cancelation (see other section), or after 5 hours departure delay and you asked to leave, or upon earlier initiative of the airline.
Yours is the choice between being refunded or rerouted using the alternative offered by the airline (probably the earliest). In this case, they will pay all care expenses until you reach your destination, unless you refuse their alternative and choose to postpone your flight.
Extra payments shall never be demanded. In case of class downgrade a partial ticket refund is due.
If the trip lost its purpose (example: you go to a concert) you can ask to be delivered back to your original airport at no extra cost and receive refund for the unused flights.
Or  you can ask to change the unused flights to another day.
If your booking includes more connected or return flights, these rules apply to all, as a set.
After this right is used, no more “care” is due (as also after arrival to the last destination in the booking).

-The compensation Right applies in case of:

  • delays of more than three hours upon arrival,
  • cancellations, unless if you were informed more than 14 days before,
  • flight misconnections within the same booking
  • refusal to board (unless the blame is yours)

and entitle each passenger to a monetary compensation of €250 to €600 (halved in a few situations) in accordance to the flight distance and other criteria, to be paid by the operating airline, the one that supplied the aircraft and crew (sometimes it is not the same airline that sold your ticket, due to codeshare agreements).

For all 3 rights:

-All flights inside the European Union are included. Also other flights operated by EU airlines as long as they depart or arrive to an European airport. If the airline is not European, only flights departing from an EU airport are included.
Obviously, EU laws do not apply to flights starting and ending outside EU, even if the airline is European.

-Besides EU countries, Swiss, Norway and Iceland also adhered to this regulation. Other countries might have similar regulations (Canada, India, USA, Turkey,…) not covered by our services.

-All passengers have these rights, even those that are not EU citizens and/or live outside the EU.

-Children are entitled too unless they travel for free.

-Care and Compensation are due to you, the victim. Ticket refund is usually sent to whom payed the ticket, though the law says it should be paid to the passenger.

-Travel agents and booking companies are out of these obligations. Some try to help passengers however they are very inefficient claiming compensations because this is out of their scope (some forward us those problems).

Many situations are not covered by ruling 261/04 (examples: the opposite of a delay, the advanced flight; multi-flight bookings partially outside EU). Others are not clear (example: “extraordinary circumstances”, “flight distance”, etc). Some posterior rulings and judgments made things clearer, but still there is a lot of controversy about many situations, that airlines try to use to avoid payments.

In case of compensation (not boarding denial, rerouting/refund or care) the 261/2004 ruling exempts the airline from the obligation to pay in special situations like bad weather, union strikes (outside the company), terrorist acts, security issues, air traffic control decisions, and some other not so clear situations.
This allows airlines to reject most claims and require deep expertise to investigate and contest. Frequently, our audit shows that the alleged circumstances are not true and our conclusions are later confirmed in Court or by the aeronautical enforcement body.


These rights can be claimed during the next 2 to 10 years, depending on the country, most usually 3 or 5 years.  Try to remember your past flight problems, then claim.

We can check your case, just email us at geral@aireclaim.com and tell us your story. We will inform your rights and your best solution (no payment, no bureaucracy).
Or you can check yourself here, then file your claim if you wish.

Flight delay and Misconnection

Distance Flight Compensation
< 1500 km 250€
1500 – 3500 km 400€
> 3500km 600€ if 1 airport is not EU
400€ if inside EU

As ruling 261/04 failed to clearly address many points, it is usually accepted (tacitly or forced by posterior judgements) that:

For every 2 hours delay some beverage should be offered to passengers unless it delays the boarding itself.
In case of misconnection the delay is measured upon the final destination and compensation is due only if all flights belong to the same booking.
In such case, distance is measured between first and last airport (but many people consider the total of all legs should be used, other consider the actual flown path because the law says “flight distance”).
Time of arrival is the time of the first opening of an aircraft (passenger) door.
If diverted or rerouted to another airport the passenger must be offered land or air transport to the original destination airport.
Technical problems are not special circumstances outside the control of the airline.

Flight Misconnections:

Though not included in ruling 261/04 this situation was addressed and ruled by some Court decisions, being usually accepted that:

When booking, it is the airline’s responsability to allow enough time clearance between 2 flights booked together, so compensation is due even for delays in the 1st flight less than 3 hours, provided the passenger arrives more than 3 hours late after rerouting.

In such case, after rerouting, the final arrival to the last airport is used to compute distance and time delay relative to the original flight, as if all flown flights were only one.
Then all other rules (see above) about flight delay apply.

Flight cancellation

In case the flight is cancelled, passengers have both these rights:

Reimbursement of the ticket price corresponding to the part of the journey that was not journeyed, as well as the part already journeyed if the purpose of the flight is no longer possible or existent
or
Free rerouting(not necessarily by air route) as soon as possible or at another time if the passenger prefers, either to the final destination or to the original airport of departure.
Compensation according to the flight distance:

Distance Compensation
< 1500 km 250€
1500 – 3500 km 400€
> 3500km 600€ if 1 airport is not EU
400€ if inside EU

However, if an alternative flight is offered arriving earlier, at the same time or later a few hours, the compensation is halved :

Distance   Intra CE   Extra CE
< 1500 km < 2 Hours 125€ < 2 Hours 125€
1500 – 3000 km < 3 Hours 200€ < 3 Hours 200€
> 3500km < 3 Hours 200€ < 4 Hours 300€

Note that this only applies to rerouting in sequence of cancellation, not to delays or other situations.

There are some exceptions. Compensation is not due if :

The cancellation was informed to the passenger 2 weeks or more prior to the flight.
The passenger was informed between 1 and 2 weeks before and was offered alternative flight departing less than 2 hours earlier or arriving no more than 4 hours later compared to the original flight.
The passenger was informed less than 1 week before and the airline provides a flight leaving up to 1 hour earlier and arriving no more than 2 hours later.

Boarding Denial

Some companies sell more tickets than seats available on the aircraft, in the statistical expectation that some passengers don’t show. Companies also reroute passengers from cancelled and overbooked flights to other flights possibly exceeding seat count, resulting in denial of board.

In case of boarding denial, the passenger is entitled to compensation regardless of the cause.

Usually airlines request voluntary passengers to cede their seats and take a later flight, possibly offering some hotel and/or food vouchers or other incentives. Their offer is probably inferior to the compensation that will then be renounced, so usually your better option is to refuse an agreement and contact us.
Then you will have the compensation, plus the replacement flight, plus food and hotel until you reach your destination.

Do not claim flight compensation if…

As the law allows airlines to reject payments in special cases, but failed to clearly specify such conditions, many airlines permanently abuse of this, specially when facing a passenger that claims directly, without support of an expert company like Aireclaim.
This works very well and saves them millions: Airlines just deny compensation based on technical arguments accepted (or not) by the UE laws, then 99% passengers will not be able to verify or contest (as we can). Even if they could, surely they would not enforce their rights (as we would) due to tremendous troubles, required know-how and high lawyer+court expenses.

However there are many legitimate situations, when airlines are not required to pay compensations, named “exceptional circumstances”. They do not apply to your other rights (care and refund/rerouting) and never apply in case of boarding denial.

DO NOT waste your time claiming if any point in this list applies to you (but don’t believe everything the attendants tell you):

  • the cause was (and you are sure) bad weather, terrorism, Air Traffic Control or strikes (but not strikes inside the airline).
  • the delay upon arrival was less than 3 hours;
  • the cancellation was informed to you 2 or more weeks before the scheduled flight;
  • your flight to EU departed from a non-EU country and the operating airline (the one that supplied the aircraft and crew) is not based in EU;
  • your missed connection flight does not share the same booking with the late flight;
  • you arrived late to the gate or missed some documents.

Technical problems are one of the most frequent arguments used by airlines to refuse compensation. That’s because, unlike weather for example, they are very difficult to be contested by the passenger or his lawyer. However we can easily enforce such payments with almost 100% success rate.

Furthermore, please note that airlines have no obligation to refund expenses:

  • without proving document;
  • after final arrival, including transport to home, or extra parking fee;
  • missed hotel, concert, etc that you booked and could not use;
  • lost working days or bad image that you suffered in your job;
  • unapproved replacement flights in another airline;
  • care expenses after you accepted ticket refund or postponed the flight (this is one of the reasons you should not rush claiming to the airline, but get our help instead).

For these kind of expenses we suggest that you check if you have an insurance (credit card, travel assistance, etc).
Ruling 261/2004 does not address these situations because it intends to compensate problems like these, so they would be compensated twice.
Anyway, all legal systems worldwide under certain conditions enforce a redress obligation (usually for 3-6 years) to those who cause prejudices, so you can still claim in Court under common law if you hire a lawyer, though your chances are probably low.

We do not handle the mentioned cases because we are highly specialized on ruling 261/2004. We also do not handle luggage claims.

Do you wanna know more? Contact Us

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