Flight Delays and Cancellations, What Actually Determines Eligibility

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Travel disruption is common.

Compensation entitlement is not automatic.

Eligibility depends on structured criteria, not inconvenience alone.

What Determines Outcome

In most cases, assessment focuses on:

• Length of delay

• Distance of flight

• Officially recorded cause

• Whether the event qualifies as “extraordinary circumstance”

The recorded reason is critical.

For example:

A technical fault caused by routine maintenance is treated differently from a weather event beyond airline control.

The classification changes eligibility.

Where Claims Fail Common reasons for rejection include:

• Delay thresholds not met

• Cause recorded as extraordinary circumstance

• Insufficient documentation

• Claim submitted outside time limits

Understanding these rules in advance changes how situations are approached.

The practical focus should be on:

• Keeping confirmation emails

• Retaining timestamps

• Checking how the delay was officially described

Regulation is threshold-based, not frustration-based, clarity improves outcomes.

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