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Is rebooked flight considered a delay


Who is responsible for flight delays caused by emergencies?Flight booked in the UK delayed 24 hours in the USPassenger rights payment for delay caused by extraordinary circumstances on another flight?Canceled + rebooked flight 10 days in advance from Europe to US - does EU compensation apply?How do Connecting flights from international destinations to US destinations work at Toronto Pearson?International flight missed because of delay in national flight - Compensation options?Airline rebooked me on another flightFind what caused a current big flight delay?less than an hour connection at LAX to SFO, originating in TorontoEmail about missed connecting flight compensation 5 months after flight, is there a point?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








3















If I miss a flight from Warsaw (WAW) to Toronto (YYZ) due to the delay of an inbound connection (Moscow (SVO) to WAW), that was purchased from the same airline on the same ticket, and they can only rebook me on the same flight the next day, would it be considered a delay of 24 hours? (even though the actual delay on the first flight was only 2 hours, and second one technically leaves on time)



If it is considered a delay and the airline needs to provide accommodations, how does the presence or absence of visa for the transit country impact it?










share|improve this question









New contributor



JagdCrab is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    Can you specify the airline and the involved countries or ideally airports? Depending on the situation, this could be a matter of regulations or just a contractual obligation.

    – jcaron
    8 hours ago











  • @jcaron I've updated question. Delayed flight is Moscow SVO to Warsaw WAW and rebooked flight is Warsaw WAW to Toronto YYZ, all tickets are purchased from LOT, so i believe it should be a subject to European regulation.

    – JagdCrab
    8 hours ago












  • The only reason I can think of that you wouldn't be due compensation (other than the ever-present "extraordinary circumstances" exception) is because your travel both started and ended outside of the EU. I'm not sure whether EC 261 regulations apply to connections through the EU.

    – Michael Seifert
    8 hours ago

















3















If I miss a flight from Warsaw (WAW) to Toronto (YYZ) due to the delay of an inbound connection (Moscow (SVO) to WAW), that was purchased from the same airline on the same ticket, and they can only rebook me on the same flight the next day, would it be considered a delay of 24 hours? (even though the actual delay on the first flight was only 2 hours, and second one technically leaves on time)



If it is considered a delay and the airline needs to provide accommodations, how does the presence or absence of visa for the transit country impact it?










share|improve this question









New contributor



JagdCrab is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    Can you specify the airline and the involved countries or ideally airports? Depending on the situation, this could be a matter of regulations or just a contractual obligation.

    – jcaron
    8 hours ago











  • @jcaron I've updated question. Delayed flight is Moscow SVO to Warsaw WAW and rebooked flight is Warsaw WAW to Toronto YYZ, all tickets are purchased from LOT, so i believe it should be a subject to European regulation.

    – JagdCrab
    8 hours ago












  • The only reason I can think of that you wouldn't be due compensation (other than the ever-present "extraordinary circumstances" exception) is because your travel both started and ended outside of the EU. I'm not sure whether EC 261 regulations apply to connections through the EU.

    – Michael Seifert
    8 hours ago













3












3








3








If I miss a flight from Warsaw (WAW) to Toronto (YYZ) due to the delay of an inbound connection (Moscow (SVO) to WAW), that was purchased from the same airline on the same ticket, and they can only rebook me on the same flight the next day, would it be considered a delay of 24 hours? (even though the actual delay on the first flight was only 2 hours, and second one technically leaves on time)



If it is considered a delay and the airline needs to provide accommodations, how does the presence or absence of visa for the transit country impact it?










share|improve this question









New contributor



JagdCrab is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











If I miss a flight from Warsaw (WAW) to Toronto (YYZ) due to the delay of an inbound connection (Moscow (SVO) to WAW), that was purchased from the same airline on the same ticket, and they can only rebook me on the same flight the next day, would it be considered a delay of 24 hours? (even though the actual delay on the first flight was only 2 hours, and second one technically leaves on time)



If it is considered a delay and the airline needs to provide accommodations, how does the presence or absence of visa for the transit country impact it?







air-travel connecting-flights delays ec261






share|improve this question









New contributor



JagdCrab is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









New contributor



JagdCrab is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 45 mins ago









Ari Brodsky

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asked 8 hours ago









JagdCrabJagdCrab

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Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • 1





    Can you specify the airline and the involved countries or ideally airports? Depending on the situation, this could be a matter of regulations or just a contractual obligation.

    – jcaron
    8 hours ago











  • @jcaron I've updated question. Delayed flight is Moscow SVO to Warsaw WAW and rebooked flight is Warsaw WAW to Toronto YYZ, all tickets are purchased from LOT, so i believe it should be a subject to European regulation.

    – JagdCrab
    8 hours ago












  • The only reason I can think of that you wouldn't be due compensation (other than the ever-present "extraordinary circumstances" exception) is because your travel both started and ended outside of the EU. I'm not sure whether EC 261 regulations apply to connections through the EU.

    – Michael Seifert
    8 hours ago












  • 1





    Can you specify the airline and the involved countries or ideally airports? Depending on the situation, this could be a matter of regulations or just a contractual obligation.

    – jcaron
    8 hours ago











  • @jcaron I've updated question. Delayed flight is Moscow SVO to Warsaw WAW and rebooked flight is Warsaw WAW to Toronto YYZ, all tickets are purchased from LOT, so i believe it should be a subject to European regulation.

    – JagdCrab
    8 hours ago












  • The only reason I can think of that you wouldn't be due compensation (other than the ever-present "extraordinary circumstances" exception) is because your travel both started and ended outside of the EU. I'm not sure whether EC 261 regulations apply to connections through the EU.

    – Michael Seifert
    8 hours ago







1




1





Can you specify the airline and the involved countries or ideally airports? Depending on the situation, this could be a matter of regulations or just a contractual obligation.

– jcaron
8 hours ago





Can you specify the airline and the involved countries or ideally airports? Depending on the situation, this could be a matter of regulations or just a contractual obligation.

– jcaron
8 hours ago













@jcaron I've updated question. Delayed flight is Moscow SVO to Warsaw WAW and rebooked flight is Warsaw WAW to Toronto YYZ, all tickets are purchased from LOT, so i believe it should be a subject to European regulation.

– JagdCrab
8 hours ago






@jcaron I've updated question. Delayed flight is Moscow SVO to Warsaw WAW and rebooked flight is Warsaw WAW to Toronto YYZ, all tickets are purchased from LOT, so i believe it should be a subject to European regulation.

– JagdCrab
8 hours ago














The only reason I can think of that you wouldn't be due compensation (other than the ever-present "extraordinary circumstances" exception) is because your travel both started and ended outside of the EU. I'm not sure whether EC 261 regulations apply to connections through the EU.

– Michael Seifert
8 hours ago





The only reason I can think of that you wouldn't be due compensation (other than the ever-present "extraordinary circumstances" exception) is because your travel both started and ended outside of the EU. I'm not sure whether EC 261 regulations apply to connections through the EU.

– Michael Seifert
8 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4















You are covered by both the 'Right to care' and 'Compensation' sections of EU261, due to the fact the airline you were flying was an EU carrier - and all EU carriers are covered by EU261 regardless of where the flight is to/from.



'Right of care' means that regardless of the reason for the delay they are required to provide you with accommodation, transportation to the accommodation, and relevant meals during your delay.



'Compensation' will depend on the reason for the delay, but in most cases you would be eligible for 600 Euro compensation based on the length of the flight, and the length of the delay - which in this case is the full 24 hours as that is how long you were delayed.



There are some exceptions for compensation that fit under the banner of "extraordinary circumstances", but these have to be things that are truly extraordinary, and completely outside of the control of the airline themselves. Something like the inbound flight being delayed would almost certainly NOT be considered extraordinary - but as you haven't stated the reason for the initial delay it's not possible to comment on whether you would be covered or not.






share|improve this answer

























  • All i know regarding reason for a delay is that plane arrived to SVO late; and that this day specifically a lot of other LOT flights to and from Warsaw was delayed for some reason. Regarding 'Compensation', i was under impression that it is only applicable for canceled flights, not rescheduled?

    – JagdCrab
    3 hours ago











  • @Jagd: the black-and-white language of the regulation only mentions compensation for cancellations, yes. But the ECJ has decided that it nevertheless applies to delays too.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago











  • Note that it's the nationality of the operating carrier that matters for EC261 eligibility, not that of the carrier that sold the ticket. So the OP may be put off luck if the flight from Moscow was a codeshare.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago











  • @HenningMakholm Aircraft was owned by LOT, so should not be a case.

    – JagdCrab
    3 hours ago


















2















It matter the delay at YYZ, so around 24 hours. This is what you paid, and what it is in your tickets. Rebooking give you boarding access to the new flight, but it doesn't change the contractual ticket.



Note: often they will find an other flights (possibly connecting to an other airport): it is often cheaper compared to let you wait 24 hours, and so paying you hotel and meals. For compensation of delays, you will have to fight (usual excuse: unforeseen problem, outside their control), but for hotel and meals they should pay you at airport, so this is a real expenses for them.






share|improve this answer



























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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    4















    You are covered by both the 'Right to care' and 'Compensation' sections of EU261, due to the fact the airline you were flying was an EU carrier - and all EU carriers are covered by EU261 regardless of where the flight is to/from.



    'Right of care' means that regardless of the reason for the delay they are required to provide you with accommodation, transportation to the accommodation, and relevant meals during your delay.



    'Compensation' will depend on the reason for the delay, but in most cases you would be eligible for 600 Euro compensation based on the length of the flight, and the length of the delay - which in this case is the full 24 hours as that is how long you were delayed.



    There are some exceptions for compensation that fit under the banner of "extraordinary circumstances", but these have to be things that are truly extraordinary, and completely outside of the control of the airline themselves. Something like the inbound flight being delayed would almost certainly NOT be considered extraordinary - but as you haven't stated the reason for the initial delay it's not possible to comment on whether you would be covered or not.






    share|improve this answer

























    • All i know regarding reason for a delay is that plane arrived to SVO late; and that this day specifically a lot of other LOT flights to and from Warsaw was delayed for some reason. Regarding 'Compensation', i was under impression that it is only applicable for canceled flights, not rescheduled?

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago











    • @Jagd: the black-and-white language of the regulation only mentions compensation for cancellations, yes. But the ECJ has decided that it nevertheless applies to delays too.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • Note that it's the nationality of the operating carrier that matters for EC261 eligibility, not that of the carrier that sold the ticket. So the OP may be put off luck if the flight from Moscow was a codeshare.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • @HenningMakholm Aircraft was owned by LOT, so should not be a case.

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago















    4















    You are covered by both the 'Right to care' and 'Compensation' sections of EU261, due to the fact the airline you were flying was an EU carrier - and all EU carriers are covered by EU261 regardless of where the flight is to/from.



    'Right of care' means that regardless of the reason for the delay they are required to provide you with accommodation, transportation to the accommodation, and relevant meals during your delay.



    'Compensation' will depend on the reason for the delay, but in most cases you would be eligible for 600 Euro compensation based on the length of the flight, and the length of the delay - which in this case is the full 24 hours as that is how long you were delayed.



    There are some exceptions for compensation that fit under the banner of "extraordinary circumstances", but these have to be things that are truly extraordinary, and completely outside of the control of the airline themselves. Something like the inbound flight being delayed would almost certainly NOT be considered extraordinary - but as you haven't stated the reason for the initial delay it's not possible to comment on whether you would be covered or not.






    share|improve this answer

























    • All i know regarding reason for a delay is that plane arrived to SVO late; and that this day specifically a lot of other LOT flights to and from Warsaw was delayed for some reason. Regarding 'Compensation', i was under impression that it is only applicable for canceled flights, not rescheduled?

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago











    • @Jagd: the black-and-white language of the regulation only mentions compensation for cancellations, yes. But the ECJ has decided that it nevertheless applies to delays too.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • Note that it's the nationality of the operating carrier that matters for EC261 eligibility, not that of the carrier that sold the ticket. So the OP may be put off luck if the flight from Moscow was a codeshare.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • @HenningMakholm Aircraft was owned by LOT, so should not be a case.

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago













    4














    4










    4









    You are covered by both the 'Right to care' and 'Compensation' sections of EU261, due to the fact the airline you were flying was an EU carrier - and all EU carriers are covered by EU261 regardless of where the flight is to/from.



    'Right of care' means that regardless of the reason for the delay they are required to provide you with accommodation, transportation to the accommodation, and relevant meals during your delay.



    'Compensation' will depend on the reason for the delay, but in most cases you would be eligible for 600 Euro compensation based on the length of the flight, and the length of the delay - which in this case is the full 24 hours as that is how long you were delayed.



    There are some exceptions for compensation that fit under the banner of "extraordinary circumstances", but these have to be things that are truly extraordinary, and completely outside of the control of the airline themselves. Something like the inbound flight being delayed would almost certainly NOT be considered extraordinary - but as you haven't stated the reason for the initial delay it's not possible to comment on whether you would be covered or not.






    share|improve this answer













    You are covered by both the 'Right to care' and 'Compensation' sections of EU261, due to the fact the airline you were flying was an EU carrier - and all EU carriers are covered by EU261 regardless of where the flight is to/from.



    'Right of care' means that regardless of the reason for the delay they are required to provide you with accommodation, transportation to the accommodation, and relevant meals during your delay.



    'Compensation' will depend on the reason for the delay, but in most cases you would be eligible for 600 Euro compensation based on the length of the flight, and the length of the delay - which in this case is the full 24 hours as that is how long you were delayed.



    There are some exceptions for compensation that fit under the banner of "extraordinary circumstances", but these have to be things that are truly extraordinary, and completely outside of the control of the airline themselves. Something like the inbound flight being delayed would almost certainly NOT be considered extraordinary - but as you haven't stated the reason for the initial delay it's not possible to comment on whether you would be covered or not.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 5 hours ago









    DocDoc

    81.7k5 gold badges190 silver badges302 bronze badges




    81.7k5 gold badges190 silver badges302 bronze badges















    • All i know regarding reason for a delay is that plane arrived to SVO late; and that this day specifically a lot of other LOT flights to and from Warsaw was delayed for some reason. Regarding 'Compensation', i was under impression that it is only applicable for canceled flights, not rescheduled?

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago











    • @Jagd: the black-and-white language of the regulation only mentions compensation for cancellations, yes. But the ECJ has decided that it nevertheless applies to delays too.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • Note that it's the nationality of the operating carrier that matters for EC261 eligibility, not that of the carrier that sold the ticket. So the OP may be put off luck if the flight from Moscow was a codeshare.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • @HenningMakholm Aircraft was owned by LOT, so should not be a case.

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago

















    • All i know regarding reason for a delay is that plane arrived to SVO late; and that this day specifically a lot of other LOT flights to and from Warsaw was delayed for some reason. Regarding 'Compensation', i was under impression that it is only applicable for canceled flights, not rescheduled?

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago











    • @Jagd: the black-and-white language of the regulation only mentions compensation for cancellations, yes. But the ECJ has decided that it nevertheless applies to delays too.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • Note that it's the nationality of the operating carrier that matters for EC261 eligibility, not that of the carrier that sold the ticket. So the OP may be put off luck if the flight from Moscow was a codeshare.

      – Henning Makholm
      3 hours ago











    • @HenningMakholm Aircraft was owned by LOT, so should not be a case.

      – JagdCrab
      3 hours ago
















    All i know regarding reason for a delay is that plane arrived to SVO late; and that this day specifically a lot of other LOT flights to and from Warsaw was delayed for some reason. Regarding 'Compensation', i was under impression that it is only applicable for canceled flights, not rescheduled?

    – JagdCrab
    3 hours ago





    All i know regarding reason for a delay is that plane arrived to SVO late; and that this day specifically a lot of other LOT flights to and from Warsaw was delayed for some reason. Regarding 'Compensation', i was under impression that it is only applicable for canceled flights, not rescheduled?

    – JagdCrab
    3 hours ago













    @Jagd: the black-and-white language of the regulation only mentions compensation for cancellations, yes. But the ECJ has decided that it nevertheless applies to delays too.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago





    @Jagd: the black-and-white language of the regulation only mentions compensation for cancellations, yes. But the ECJ has decided that it nevertheless applies to delays too.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago













    Note that it's the nationality of the operating carrier that matters for EC261 eligibility, not that of the carrier that sold the ticket. So the OP may be put off luck if the flight from Moscow was a codeshare.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago





    Note that it's the nationality of the operating carrier that matters for EC261 eligibility, not that of the carrier that sold the ticket. So the OP may be put off luck if the flight from Moscow was a codeshare.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago













    @HenningMakholm Aircraft was owned by LOT, so should not be a case.

    – JagdCrab
    3 hours ago





    @HenningMakholm Aircraft was owned by LOT, so should not be a case.

    – JagdCrab
    3 hours ago













    2















    It matter the delay at YYZ, so around 24 hours. This is what you paid, and what it is in your tickets. Rebooking give you boarding access to the new flight, but it doesn't change the contractual ticket.



    Note: often they will find an other flights (possibly connecting to an other airport): it is often cheaper compared to let you wait 24 hours, and so paying you hotel and meals. For compensation of delays, you will have to fight (usual excuse: unforeseen problem, outside their control), but for hotel and meals they should pay you at airport, so this is a real expenses for them.






    share|improve this answer





























      2















      It matter the delay at YYZ, so around 24 hours. This is what you paid, and what it is in your tickets. Rebooking give you boarding access to the new flight, but it doesn't change the contractual ticket.



      Note: often they will find an other flights (possibly connecting to an other airport): it is often cheaper compared to let you wait 24 hours, and so paying you hotel and meals. For compensation of delays, you will have to fight (usual excuse: unforeseen problem, outside their control), but for hotel and meals they should pay you at airport, so this is a real expenses for them.






      share|improve this answer



























        2














        2










        2









        It matter the delay at YYZ, so around 24 hours. This is what you paid, and what it is in your tickets. Rebooking give you boarding access to the new flight, but it doesn't change the contractual ticket.



        Note: often they will find an other flights (possibly connecting to an other airport): it is often cheaper compared to let you wait 24 hours, and so paying you hotel and meals. For compensation of delays, you will have to fight (usual excuse: unforeseen problem, outside their control), but for hotel and meals they should pay you at airport, so this is a real expenses for them.






        share|improve this answer













        It matter the delay at YYZ, so around 24 hours. This is what you paid, and what it is in your tickets. Rebooking give you boarding access to the new flight, but it doesn't change the contractual ticket.



        Note: often they will find an other flights (possibly connecting to an other airport): it is often cheaper compared to let you wait 24 hours, and so paying you hotel and meals. For compensation of delays, you will have to fight (usual excuse: unforeseen problem, outside their control), but for hotel and meals they should pay you at airport, so this is a real expenses for them.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 8 hours ago









        Giacomo CatenazziGiacomo Catenazzi

        3,90010 silver badges22 bronze badges




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