Published on : 13 Mar 2026
Flight cancelled, what to do in 2026 β here is the definitive answer, in the right order, with the exact words to say, covering every country where it matters.
Most passengers lose hundreds of dollars when their flight is cancelled because they accept a voucher when they were owed cash, skip a meal claim they were entitled to, or give up on compensation because the process looked complicated. This expert guide β built on US DOT rules, EU261, UK261, Canadian APPR, and Australian Consumer Law β closes every one of those gaps.
About this guide: TravelTourister’s aviation rights team has reviewed official DOT, EU261, UK261, APPR, and Australian Consumer Law regulations for 2026. Every compensation figure, every deadline, and every claim process in this article is verified against the original regulatory source. Last reviewed: March 13, 2026.
Bookmark this page before your next trip. The 10 minutes you spend reading it could save you $600.
If your flight has just been cancelled and you are reading this at the airport, start here:
Now read the full guide for everything else.
The cancellation reason determines everything: what you are owed, whether you get fixed compensation, and whether your travel insurance will pay out.
Ask the airline β at the desk, via app, or in writing β for the specific reason code. Airlines are required to provide this in most jurisdictions. The reason will fall into one of two categories:
These are situations where the airline made a decision or failed operationally.
βοΈ Crew scheduling failure β not enough pilots or cabin crew rostered βοΈ Aircraft mechanical issue β maintenance problem known in advance βοΈ IT system failure β booking system, check-in, or operations software βοΈ Overbooking β airline sold more seats than the aircraft has βοΈ Late inbound aircraft β due to airline operational decisions βοΈ Commercial decision β airline withdrew the route or reduced capacity
What this means for you: Maximum rights apply. In the EU and UK, fixed cash compensation is owed. In the US, full cash refund is owed and most airlines will provide meals and hotels. In all jurisdictions, duty of care applies in full.
These are genuine external events the airline could not avoid.
βοΈ Severe weather β storms, snow, fog, lightning at the airport βοΈ Air traffic control strikes or restrictions βοΈ Airport security incidents βοΈ Political instability or airspace closures (such as the March 2026 Middle East crisis) βοΈ Medical emergency on board requiring diversion βοΈ Bird strikes causing damage
What this means for you: Fixed cash compensation is NOT owed in the EU and UK. However β and this is the most misunderstood rule in aviation β your right to a full cash refund and your right to duty of care (meals, hotel, transport) are ALWAYS owed regardless of the cause. Extraordinary circumstances only removes the fixed compensation. It removes nothing else.
The words to watch for: Airlines sometimes write “operational reasons” on cancellation notices β this is deliberately vague. “Operational reasons” is not a confirmed extraordinary circumstance. Challenge it if you are pursuing EU261 or UK261 compensation.
When your flight is cancelled, you have a binary choice in every major jurisdiction. You must choose one. You cannot have both.
| Your Choice | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Rebook | Airline puts you on the next available flight at no extra cost |
| Full cash refund | Airline returns 100% of what you paid to your original payment method |
If you want to reach your destination, ask to be rebooked on the next available flight. Key rules:
βοΈ The airline must rebook you at no extra cost βοΈ You can ask to be rebooked on a partner airline or even a competitor if the airline’s next available flight is unacceptably late β in the EU/UK this is a defined right; in the US it depends on the airline’s customer service plan βοΈ You may be able to rebook to a different nearby airport β ask specifically βοΈ If the airline’s app auto-rebooks you to an unacceptable flight, you can reject it and request alternatives
Pro tip: Open the airline’s app the moment you receive a cancellation notification. Self-rebooking on the app is often faster than queuing at the desk, and available seats disappear quickly when hundreds of passengers are all rebooking simultaneously.
If you choose not to travel β or if the rebooking offer is unacceptable β you are owed a full cash refund in every major jurisdiction.
The critical rule: Request cash. Not a voucher. Not a travel credit. Not miles. Cash β returned to your original payment method.
Many airlines will offer a voucher first because vouchers cost them less (unused vouchers become pure profit; cash refunds do not). You are under no obligation to accept a voucher unless you specifically want one.
The words to say:
Refund timeline:
Regardless of why your flight was cancelled and regardless of which country you are in, you are entitled to immediate care while you wait. This is called “duty of care” in EU/UK law and is reflected in the customer service commitments of all major US and Canadian airlines.
You do not need to wait to be offered this. Ask for it immediately.
Meals and refreshments: Ask the gate agent or airline desk for a meal voucher. In the EU and UK this is triggered after a 2-hour wait for short-haul, 3 hours for medium-haul, 4 hours for long-haul. In the US, Delta, United, American, Southwest, Alaska, JetBlue, Hawaiian, and Frontier have all committed to providing meals for controllable cancellations β check the DOT dashboard at transportation.gov.
Hotel accommodation: If you cannot fly until the next day, the airline must arrange hotel accommodation in the EU and UK. In the US, all major carriers have committed to providing hotels for controllable cancellations (DOT dashboard confirmed).
Transport: To and from the hotel β the airline must arrange or reimburse this in the EU/UK. In the US, most major carriers commit to ground transportation for controllable cancellations.
Communication: Two phone calls, texts, or emails β EU/UK confirmed right.
Buy what you need and keep every receipt. You can claim reimbursement later. Set a reasonable limit β a $15 airport meal is clearly reasonable; a $200 airport dinner is not. Courts and regulators in all jurisdictions apply a “reasonable” standard.
What to keep: βοΈ Every food and drink receipt from the airport βοΈ Hotel invoice (request an itemised receipt) βοΈ Taxi, Uber, or shuttle receipt between airport and hotel βοΈ Any transport you booked to reach an alternative airport βοΈ Car parking you could not cancel βοΈ Non-refundable hotel nights at your destination that became worthless
This is the step most passengers either skip (not knowing it exists) or give up on (thinking it is too complicated). Here is exactly what you are owed, jurisdiction by jurisdiction.
The US does not have a fixed compensation scheme equivalent to EU261. What you have instead:
Automatic cash refund (2024 DOT rule β fully in force 2026): βοΈ Any cancelled flight β full cash refund if you choose not to travel βοΈ Significant delay (domestic: 3+ hours; international: 6+ hours) β full cash refund if you choose not to travel βοΈ Significant change to itinerary (different airport, more connections, downgraded cabin) β full cash refund βοΈ This applies to ALL tickets including non-refundable fares βοΈ Refund must be to original payment method β not vouchers unless you agree
Airline customer service commitments (DOT dashboard):
The DOT publishes a dashboard showing exactly what each major US airline has committed to provide. As of 2026, for controllable cancellations and significant delays, ALL of these airlines commit to the following:
| Airline | Free rebooking | Meals | Hotel | Ground transport |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delta | β Same day, same airline + partners | β | β | β |
| United | β Same day | β | β | β |
| American | β Same day | β | β | β |
| Southwest | β Same day | β | β | β |
| JetBlue | β Same day | β | β | β |
| Alaska | β Same day | β | β | β |
| Spirit | β Same day | β | β | β |
| Frontier | β Same day | β | β | β |
Important: These commitments apply only to controllable cancellations. Weather, ATC, and extraordinary circumstances are excluded from meal and hotel commitments β though the cash refund right always applies regardless.
How to claim in the US:
EU261 is the strongest passenger rights law in the world. It applies to: βοΈ ALL flights departing from any EU airport (any airline) βοΈ Flights arriving INTO the EU operated by an EU-based carrier βοΈ Does NOT apply to non-EU carriers flying into the EU
The fixed compensation table:
| Flight Distance | Delay at Destination | Cash Compensation |
|---|---|---|
| Under 1,500km | 3+ hours | β¬250 |
| 1,500kmβ3,500km | 3+ hours | β¬400 |
| Over 3,500km | 4+ hours | β¬600 |
Compensation is reduced by 50% if the airline offers a rerouting that gets you to your destination within the delay thresholds.
Notification rules β cancellation compensation: βοΈ Told less than 7 days before departure β full compensation owed βοΈ Told 7β14 days before AND offered rerouting within tight windows β compensation may be reduced or zero βοΈ Told more than 14 days before β no compensation owed (but refund always owed)
Extraordinary circumstances β what airlines try to claim: Bad weather, ATC strikes, security threats, and airspace closures (such as the 2026 Middle East crisis) are genuine extraordinary circumstances β no fixed compensation is owed. Airline IT failures, crew shortages, and maintenance issues are NOT extraordinary β airlines sometimes claim them as such. Challenge any vague “operational” or “technical” reason in writing.
How to claim EU261:
Key NEBs (free):
Post-Brexit, the UK adopted its own version of EU261 β known informally as UK261 (retained under the Air Passenger Rights and Air Travel Organisers’ Licensing (Amendment) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019).
UK261 applies to: βοΈ ALL flights departing from a UK airport (any airline) βοΈ Flights arriving INTO the UK on UK or EU-based carriers
The fixed compensation table:
| Flight Distance | Delay at Destination | Cash Compensation |
|---|---|---|
| Under 1,500km | 3+ hours | Β£220 |
| 1,500kmβ3,500km | 3+ hours | Β£350 |
| Over 3,500km | 4+ hours | Β£520 |
The rules for extraordinary circumstances, duty of care, refunds, and notification are identical to EU261 β same framework, converted to GBP and enforced by UK regulators.
How to claim UK261:
Canada’s APPR came into force in 2019 and was strengthened in 2022. It is less generous than EU261 but stronger than pre-2024 US rules.
APPR applies to: All flights to, from, or within Canada on airlines with 10+ passengers per flight.
The compensation table (controllable cancellations only):
| Airline Size | Compensation |
|---|---|
| Large airline (Air Canada, WestJet, Air Transat, Sunwing, Porter 100+ seat aircraft) | CAD $900 if informed less than 14 days before departure and no rebooking within 9 hours |
| Small airline | CAD $125β$500 depending on delay length |
Immediate care rights (all cancellations, including weather): βοΈ After 3 hours: meal voucher β minimum CAD $10 (first 2 hours) + $10 each additional hour βοΈ After overnight delay: hotel accommodation + transport to and from airport βοΈ Free rebooking on same airline within 9 hours OR on any other airline within 48 hours
How to claim APPR:
Australia does not have an EU261-style fixed compensation law for flight cancellations. Your rights come from two sources: Australian Consumer Law (ACL) and the individual airline’s conditions of carriage.
What ACL guarantees: βοΈ If a service (your flight) is not provided, you are entitled to a remedy β either re-performance (rebooking) or a refund βοΈ This applies regardless of whether the ticket is non-refundable βοΈ The remedy must be proportionate β a full cancellation entitles you to a full refund
Qantas, Virgin Australia, Jetstar specific commitments: βοΈ Qantas: Full refund for cancelled flights; meals for delays over 4 hours; hotels for overnight delays due to Qantas reasons βοΈ Virgin Australia: Full refund for cancelled flights; meal vouchers for controllable delays βοΈ Jetstar: Refund or rebooking; duty of care limited β check specific conditions
What Australia does NOT have: Fixed cash compensation beyond the ticket price is not guaranteed under Australian law. If a Qantas flight is cancelled due to weather, you get your ticket money back and that is broadly it β unlike in the EU/UK where you may also receive β¬250ββ¬600 on top.
How to claim in Australia:
Missed connections are where cancellations become expensive, and the rules here are the most frequently misunderstood.
If both flights (the cancelled one and your connection) are on the same booking reference (PNR), the airline is responsible for getting you to your final destination. This applies whether the second flight is with the same airline or a partner airline on a codeshare.
βοΈ The airline must rebook you on the next available flight to your final destination at no extra cost βοΈ If the only option involves an overnight stay, duty of care applies βοΈ Your EU261/UK261 delay compensation is measured at your final destination β not at the connection point
If you booked two separate itineraries (e.g., a Ryanair flight to Amsterdam and then a separate KLM flight to Tokyo), the airlines have no obligation to each other. If Ryanair cancels, KLM owes you nothing and will charge you standard change fees or require a new ticket.
What to do with separate bookings: βοΈ Call the second airline immediately when the first flight is cancelled β explain the situation and ask for flexibility (many airlines will waive change fees informally when you explain) βοΈ If you have travel insurance purchased before the disruption: file a missed connection claim immediately βοΈ If your credit card has trip interruption coverage: call the card’s travel desk β many will cover rebooking costs
Future protection for separate bookings: Always allow a minimum 3-hour connection buffer at the same airport when booking separate itineraries. At major hubs like Heathrow, Frankfurt, or JFK during disruption periods, 4β5 hours is safer.
Travel insurance can significantly supplement what the airline owes you β especially for extraordinary circumstances where the airline’s obligations are limited.
βοΈ Trip cancellation: Non-refundable costs if you choose not to travel βοΈ Trip interruption: Additional costs incurred mid-trip βοΈ Trip delay: Accommodation, meals, and transport during extended waits βοΈ Missed connection: Rebooking costs for separately booked connections βοΈ Baggage delay: Essential items purchased when bags don’t arrive
If you purchase travel insurance after a disruption event becomes publicly known, your claim for that event will almost certainly be denied. Insurers call this the “known event” exclusion.
In 2026 this matters specifically because:
Always purchase travel insurance at the time of booking β not when disruption appears imminent.
Many premium travel credit cards include trip cancellation, trip interruption, and trip delay coverage automatically when you purchase your ticket with that card. This is separate from travel insurance and is often overlooked.
Cards with strong trip disruption coverage (as of 2026):
Call the number on the back of your card immediately after a cancellation to understand what is covered and what documentation you need to preserve.
Most passengers who are owed compensation never collect it β not because their claim is invalid, but because they do not follow through. Here is the exact process for each jurisdiction.
Before you file any claim, gather: βοΈ Your booking confirmation with PNR/booking reference βοΈ Your boarding pass (or evidence you were checked in) βοΈ Screenshot of flight status showing cancellation β with timestamp βοΈ Any email or app notification from the airline about the cancellation βοΈ The airline’s stated reason for cancellation (if given) βοΈ All receipts: food, hotel, transport, car parking, missed bookings βοΈ Any written communication from airline staff at the airport
Time limit: EU261 claims must generally be filed within 3 years (varies by country β France: 5 years, Germany: 3 years, Spain: 1 year β check your country of departure).
Mistake 1 β Accepting a voucher instead of cash Airlines know that up to 40% of vouchers are never redeemed. They will offer vouchers first. Always request cash to your original payment method. You can always buy a voucher later if you decide you want one β you cannot un-accept a voucher once you have agreed to it.
Mistake 2 β Not asking for a meal voucher at the gate Every hour you wait without asking is an hour the airline is happy to let pass. Walk to the gate agent or airline desk within the first 30 minutes and ask: “Am I entitled to a meal voucher while I wait?”
Mistake 3 β Leaving the airport without documentation Once you leave, it becomes much harder to prove what was said and offered. Before leaving the airport, get: written confirmation of the cancellation, the stated reason, and confirmation of any compensation or rebooking offered.
Mistake 4 β Booking two separate tickets with a tight connection If you book Ryanair + separate long-haul ticket, no airline is responsible for the connection. A 3-hour buffer minimum. 4β5 hours at major European hubs.
Mistake 5 β Buying travel insurance after the disruption starts The known event exclusion kills claims purchased after news breaks. Buy insurance at booking β not when you are packing.
Mistake 6 β Not knowing your jurisdiction Your rights depend on where you are flying FROM, not where the airline is based. A United Airlines flight from London Heathrow is covered by UK261 β not US DOT rules. An Iberia flight from Madrid to New York is covered by EU261 on the departure leg.
Mistake 7 β Giving up after the airline’s first rejection Airlines reject EU261 and UK261 claims at high rates on first submission β including valid claims. The free regulatory escalation routes (NEB, CEDR, CTA) have significantly higher success rates than initial airline responses. Rejection is not the end.
Mistake 8 β Paying a claims company before checking the free options AirHelp, ClaimCompass, and similar services are legitimate β but they take 25β35% of your compensation. The free routes (NEB, CEDR, CTA, DOT) achieve the same result. Use paid services only if you genuinely do not have time to handle the process.
Mistake 9 β Not claiming for consequential losses Beyond the ticket refund and fixed compensation, you may be owed: non-refundable hotel nights at your destination, pre-booked tours or transfers, car hire, and emergency accommodation en route. Document everything and include it in your claim.
Mistake 10 β Waiting too long to file EU261 has a minimum 1-year and maximum 6-year window depending on country. UK261 allows 6 years. But evidence fades, emails get deleted, and airline records are not kept forever. File within 60 days of the incident β while everything is fresh and documented.
| Right | US | EU | UK | Canada | Australia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full cash refund if cancelled | β | β | β | β | β |
| Free rebooking option | β | β | β | β | β |
| Meal voucher (controllable) | β most airlines | β | β | β | Qantas/Virgin |
| Hotel (controllable, overnight) | β most airlines | β | β | β | Qantas/Virgin |
| Country | Maximum | Applies To |
|---|---|---|
| EU | β¬600 | Flights from EU airports + EU carriers into EU |
| UK | Β£520 | Flights from UK airports + UK/EU carriers into UK |
| Canada | CAD $900 | Flights to/from/within Canada |
| US | $0 fixed | No fixed comp β but full cash refund + duty of care |
| Australia | $0 fixed | No fixed comp β but full cash refund under ACL |
“I would like a cash refund.”
Say these words. Every time. At the desk, in the app, in the email. The moment you accept a voucher, you have given up your right to cash. The moment you say cash, the airline’s obligation is clear and enforceable.
A cancelled flight is stressful. It does not have to be expensive. In every country where TravelTourister’s readers fly, the law is on your side β you are owed at minimum a full cash refund and the right to be fed and housed while you wait. In the EU and UK, you may be owed an additional β¬600 or Β£520 on top of that.
The passengers who walk away with nothing are almost always the ones who accepted the first offer, skipped the meal voucher, or gave up after a first rejection. The passengers who walk away whole are the ones who knew these five steps before they needed them.
You now know all five. Bookmark this page. Send it to whoever you travel with. And the next time a gate agent hands you a voucher form β ask for cash instead.
Posted By : Vinay
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