How Long Does Flight Compensation Take?
Understand the typical timelines for EU261 and UK261 flight compensation, and how to speed up your claim.
In this guide
What Determines the Timeline?
There is no single answer to how long a claim takes. The timeline depends on a combination of factors — some within your control, some not.
Type of disruption
A straightforward 4-hour delay is simpler to prove than a cancellation caused by a chain of events. Simpler claims move faster.
Airline response time
Some airlines respond within 2 weeks. Others take 6–8 weeks or simply ignore initial claims. Budget airlines tend to be slower.
Complexity of claim
Technical faults, crew shortages, and strikes often require legal references and escalation. Weather-related claims may be rejected and need challenging.
Documentation completeness
A claim with boarding pass, delay notification, and arrival proof gets processed faster than one with missing information.
Legal escalation needed
If the airline rejects your claim, escalating to ADR or court adds 8–18 weeks. Most successful claims that go to ADR are resolved within 3 months.
DIY vs Claim Company vs Claim Package
The method you choose has a direct impact on how long your claim takes — and how much compensation you end up with.
| Option | Typical Duration | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIY Claim | 1–12 months | Keep 100% | May be slow; rejected claims need escalation |
| Claim Company | 2–6 months | Minimal effort | Fees 25%–50%; some delays possible |
| Claim Package | 2–8 weeks | Keep most compensation; templates included | Small one-time fee |
Claim Packages include guidance and escalation templates that help speed up the claim significantly. A well-structured first letter with legal references often eliminates weeks of back-and-forth with the airline.
Typical Compensation Timelines
These timelines are based on reported outcomes from passengers and ADR bodies. Your actual experience may vary, but they give a realistic picture of what to expect.
| Flight Issue | DIY Claim | Claim Company | Claim Package |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short delay (<3h) | 2–4 weeks | 1–2 weeks | 1–2 weeks |
| Long delay (>3h) | 1–6 months | 1–3 months | 2–4 weeks |
| Cancellation | 2–12 months | 2–6 months | 3–8 weeks |
| Missed connection | 2–8 months | 1–4 months | 2–6 weeks |
| Technical fault | 1–12 months | 2–6 months | 3–8 weeks |
| Crew shortage | 1–12 months | 2–6 months | 3–8 weeks |
| Strike | 1–12 months | 2–6 months | 3–8 weeks |
| Weather | 1–6 months | 2–4 months | 2–6 weeks |
Why the difference?
Claim Packages produce faster results because the initial claim letter is legally structured and includes all required evidence upfront. Airlines take these claims more seriously than generic complaints, which reduces the likelihood of a first-round rejection and eliminates weeks of back-and-forth.
Factors That Affect Processing Time
Even with a strong claim, some factors are outside your control. Understanding them helps set realistic expectations.
Airline size and efficiency
Large legacy carriers (Lufthansa, BA, Air France) tend to have dedicated claims departments and respond faster. Low-cost carriers (Ryanair, Wizz Air) often take longer or reject first as standard practice.
Complexity of case
Claims involving extraordinary circumstances, connecting flights on separate bookings, or disputed facts take longer to resolve than simple delays with clear evidence.
Jurisdiction differences
EU and UK claims follow the same regulation but different ADR bodies and court systems. Some countries process ADR complaints faster than others. CEDR (UK) typically resolves cases in 8–12 weeks.
Holidays and peak seasons
Claims submitted during summer or Christmas periods face longer queues — both at airlines and ADR bodies. File as soon as possible after the disruption.
Missing documentation
Incomplete claims are the single biggest cause of delays. If the airline has to request additional information, add 2–4 weeks to the timeline.
Passenger follow-up frequency
Airlines prioritise claims that are actively followed up. A polite but firm follow-up after 3–4 weeks of silence can move your case forward.
How to Speed Up Your Claim
You cannot control how fast the airline responds, but you can control how well-prepared your claim is. These are the actions that make the biggest difference.
Submit complete flight details and evidence
Include your boarding pass, booking confirmation, delay notification, and arrival time proof in your first submission. Do not wait for the airline to ask.
Respond promptly to airline requests
If the airline asks for additional information, reply within 48 hours. Every day you delay adds a day to your timeline.
Use Claim Package templates for escalation
Pre-written letters that cite specific EU261/UK261 articles and ECJ rulings get taken more seriously than generic complaints. They also eliminate the time you would spend researching legal references.
Follow up regularly but professionally
Send a follow-up email if you have not heard back within 3–4 weeks. Reference your original claim date and the regulation. Do not send multiple emails in the same week — it will not speed things up.
Check if multiple passengers can be combined
If you travelled with others on the same booking, submitting a joint claim can be more efficient than filing separately. Some airlines process group claims faster.
Using Claim Package guidance can cut weeks off the claim timeline. The templates are pre-written with legal references, so you skip the research phase and submit a claim the airline has to take seriously from day one.
Real Examples
Same types of disruption, very different timelines depending on how the claim was handled.
| Route | Disruption | DIY | Claim Package |
|---|---|---|---|
| London → Paris | Delay 4h | 2 months | 3 weeks |
| Madrid → Berlin | Cancellation | 5 months | 5 weeks |
| Dublin → New York | Crew shortage | 6 months | 6 weeks |
| Paris → London | Technical fault | 4 months | 4 weeks |
| Amsterdam → Rome | Strike (airline staff) | 8 months | 7 weeks |
| Berlin → Istanbul | Missed connection | 4 months | 5 weeks |
The pattern is consistent
Claims submitted with structured letters and complete evidence are resolved significantly faster. The Dublin → New York case took 6 months DIY because the airline rejected the initial claim and the passenger had to research how to escalate. With a Claim Package, the escalation path is built in — the same case was resolved in 6 weeks.
FAQ
How long does a DIY claim usually take?
It depends on the airline and the complexity of your case. A straightforward delay claim with complete evidence can be resolved in 2–4 weeks if the airline cooperates. More commonly, expect 1–3 months. If the airline rejects your claim and you need to escalate to ADR, add another 8–12 weeks. Court cases take 6–18 months.
How long do claim companies take?
Claim companies typically take 2–6 months. They follow the same process as a DIY claim — submit to the airline, wait, follow up, escalate to ADR if needed. They do not have a special fast-track with airlines. The main time saving is that you do not spend your own hours on the process.
Can I speed up my claim with a template?
Yes. A well-structured claim letter that cites the relevant EU261/UK261 articles and includes all required evidence upfront reduces back-and-forth with the airline. Claim Package templates are designed to do exactly this — they include legal references, evidence checklists, and escalation letters so you can skip the research phase.
Does EU261 vs UK261 affect processing time?
Not significantly. Both regulations set the same compensation amounts and eligibility criteria. The main difference is which ADR body handles your escalation — CEDR or Aviation ADR for UK claims, and national bodies (SÖP in Germany, etc.) for EU claims. Processing times at ADR bodies are broadly similar across Europe.
How long after a rejected claim should I escalate?
As soon as you are confident the airline will not change its position. If you have sent a follow-up letter citing legal references and the airline still refuses, file with ADR immediately. Do not wait — the limitation period is ticking. In most countries, you have 1–6 years to escalate, but there is no advantage to waiting.
Can multiple passengers claim together?
Yes. If you were on the same booking, you can submit a single claim covering all passengers. Some airlines process group claims faster because they only need to review one set of evidence. Each passenger is entitled to compensation individually, so a family of four on a €600-per-person route could claim €2,400 total.
What if the airline delays responding?
Airlines are expected to respond within a reasonable timeframe — typically 6–8 weeks under national enforcement body guidelines. If they do not respond at all, send a follow-up referencing the deadline you set in your original claim, then escalate to ADR. Ignoring a claim is not a valid defence, and ADR bodies take a dim view of airlines that fail to respond.
Why do some claims take so long?
Three main reasons: airlines rejecting valid claims as a first response (forcing you to escalate), incomplete documentation that requires back-and-forth, and ADR or court backlogs during peak travel seasons. You can minimise all three by submitting a complete, legally referenced claim from the start.
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This guide is provided for informational purposes only. FlightClaimGuide does not provide legal advice and recommends seeking independent professional advice for complex legal matters.