
Flight Cancelled Due to Strike — Can You Still Claim Compensation?
June 18, 2026
Extraordinary Circumstances — When Airlines Don’t Have to Pay Compensation
June 18, 2026Yes, you may be able to claim flight diverted compensation if you reached your original destination 3 or more hours late and the cause was within the airline’s control. On top of that, the airline must transport you from the diversion airport to your booked airport at its own cost. You could be owed up to €600 per passenger.
Being told mid-flight that you are landing somewhere else is unsettling. One minute you are descending towards Manchester, the next you are on the tarmac in Liverpool with no clear idea how you will get home. The good news is that EU Regulation 261/2004 (and its post-Brexit twin, UK 261) treats diversions seriously, and your rights are stronger than most passengers realise.
If you want a quick answer for your own flight, you can check your compensation in a couple of minutes.
What counts as a diversion?
A diversion happens when your aircraft lands at an airport other than the one printed on your ticket. This can occur for many reasons: bad weather closing your destination, a medical emergency on board, congestion, a technical issue, or airport curfews.
A diversion is not the same as a flight cancelled compensation scenario, where the flight never operates at all. With a diversion, your flight did fly — it simply ended up in the wrong place. That distinction matters, because it changes which rights apply.
Your rights when diverted
The single most important rule is this: if your flight is diverted, the airline must get you to your original booked destination at no extra cost to you. You should never be left to fund your own onward journey.
In practice, the airline should arrange and pay for onward transport — typically a coach, train, or connecting flight — from the diversion airport to your ticketed airport. If they fail to organise this and you arrange your own reasonable transport, keep every receipt so you can reclaim the cost.
You also keep your right to care while you wait: meals and refreshments appropriate to the delay, and accommodation plus transfers if you are kept overnight. These care rights apply even when the diversion was caused by something outside the airline’s control.
When a diversion entitles you to compensation
Cash compensation under EU 261 depends on how late you arrive at your final destination — not when you touched down at the diversion airport. The clock includes the time spent being transferred onward.
So if your plane lands early at the wrong airport but the coach transfer means you reach your booked destination 3 or more hours behind schedule, you are treated exactly like a delayed passenger. The reference point is when the aircraft door opens at your true destination, or when you finally arrive there by the airline’s onward transport.
The amount depends on the distance of your original flight:
| Flight distance | Compensation per passenger |
| Up to 1,500 km | €250 |
| 1,500–3,500 km | €400 |
| Over 3,500 km | €600 |
These are the same tiers used to work out the delayed flight compensation amount for any disrupted journey. Compensation is paid per passenger, so a family of four could be owed four times the figure above.
For UK 261 claims, the equivalent amounts are £220, £350 and £520.
When a diversion is treated as a cancellation
Sometimes a diversion is not really a diversion at all. If the airline lands you elsewhere and then abandons the route — leaving you to find your own way to the booked destination with no onward transport offered — the situation can be treated as a cancellation.
In that case you are entitled to a full refund within seven days or rerouting, plus care, and potentially compensation on the cancellation rules. This overlaps with denied boarding compensation principles, where the airline’s failure to deliver the contracted service triggers your protections. If you were simply dumped at an unfamiliar airport, push back firmly.
Diversions caused by extraordinary circumstances
Not every diversion leads to a cash payout. If the diversion was caused by genuinely extraordinary circumstances — events outside the airline’s control that could not have been avoided even with all reasonable measures — then no compensation is due.
Common examples include severe weather closing the runway at your destination, air-traffic-control restrictions, security alerts, or a bird strike damaging the aircraft. The burden of proving extraordinary circumstances sits with the airline, not with you.
Crucially, even when the diversion is extraordinary, you do not lose your right to care or your right to be taken onward to your booked airport. The airline must still feed you, accommodate you overnight if needed, and complete your journey.
Real-world scenarios
Picture a klm compensation case: a KLM flight bound for Amsterdam Schiphol is diverted to Brussels because of congestion at Schiphol. The airline puts passengers on a coach to Amsterdam. If you finally reach Schiphol 3.5 hours after your scheduled arrival, and the cause was within the airline’s control, you would likely be owed compensation — plus the coach was, rightly, free.
Now picture the opposite. A flight to Edinburgh is diverted to Glasgow because fog has closed Edinburgh airport entirely. The airline transfers you onward by coach, but because fog is an extraordinary circumstance, no cash compensation is due — though your transfer and any meals must still be covered.
How to claim
Building a strong claim is mostly about evidence. Take these steps:
- Keep your boarding pass and booking confirmation, showing the original destination.
- Note the actual arrival time at your booked airport — that is the figure that decides your claim.
- Save all transfer receipts — coach, train, taxi, or fuel — in case you had to arrange your own onward travel.
- Photograph departure boards or announcements that explain the diversion.
- Hold on to meal and hotel receipts if you incurred care costs the airline should have covered.
You can submit a claim yourself directly to the airline, or let a flight compensation company handle the paperwork and any pushback for you. With FlyHelp, the service is no win, no fee — a success fee applies only if your compensation is recovered, and our team can take the case all the way to court if the airline refuses a valid claim.
Ready to find out where you stand? Check your compensation and we will tell you what your diverted flight could be worth.
Frequently Asked Questions
My flight landed at a different airport — can I claim compensation?
Possibly. If you reached your original booked destination 3 or more hours late once onward transfer is included, and the cause was within the airline’s control, you can claim up to €600 per passenger. If the diversion was caused by extraordinary circumstances such as severe weather, no cash is due — but the airline must still take you onward and cover your care.
Does the airline have to take me to my original destination?
Yes. When your flight is diverted, the airline must transport you from the diversion airport to your booked destination at its own cost, usually by coach, train, or connecting flight. This duty applies even when the diversion itself was caused by extraordinary circumstances. You should never have to fund your own onward journey to reach the airport on your ticket.
Can I claim back taxi or train costs after a diversion?
Yes, if the airline failed to arrange suitable onward transport and you had to make your own reasonable arrangements. Keep every receipt — taxi, train, coach, or fuel — and submit them with your claim. Costs must be reasonable; a standard train fare will be reimbursed, but a luxury private hire may be challenged. Always give the airline the chance to arrange transport first.




