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Instantly determine if you're owed flight compensation, calculate the exact amount, and file claims automatically when airlines disrupt your travel.
Added Nov 7, 2025
3 signals
When flights are cancelled or significantly changed, travelers don't know if they're entitled to compensation under complex regulations like EC261 or DOT rules. They struggle to determine eligibility based on their specific situation (airline, route, timing, reason for disruption) and navigate the claims process while dealing with the immediate stress of rebooking travel.
Detailed solution approach available for premium members.
Market timing analysis available for premium members.
Air Tahiti Nui changed my 7:00 AM flight to Seattle tomorrow to 11:30 PM Monday to LA with no connection to Seattle. My hotel can't extend me a day either. I got the notification at 6:42 PM, just over 12 hours before departure. Since French Polynesia is part of France, does EC261 apply? --- My Internet connection is spotty so research is difficult. Second edit.... I am currently waiting for their counter to open for another flight tonight.
Hi there. My flights just got changed and I am wondering if they apply to EU law and thus the compensation. The situation is the following, this is all booked with condor: Honolulu -> (Hawaiian airlines) Seattle -> (condor) Frankfurt. Now the Hawaiian airline leg is cancelled and the new itinerary is: Honolulu -> (Hawaiian) Las Vegas -> (American) Dallas -> (American) Frankfurt This was communicated to me by Hawaiian airlines and confirmed by condor. I will keep this itinerary. The new arrival is quite a bit later that originally planned. Do I still qualify for compensation now that I was put on an American airline flight in returning to Frankfurt? Thank you so much for any help!
My family was stuck on a Frontier flight that sat on the tarmac for hours before we were finally deboarded. The flight never took off, and Frontier only reimbursed us for the canceled flight itself. The problem is, they still had to get home — so we ended up buying last-minute tickets from another airline, which were crazy expensive. I filed a claim through my credit card’s travel insurance (since I booked the original flight with that card), but they only covered food and toiletries from the delay, not the new flight. Has anyone had luck getting reimbursed for replacement flights in a situation like this? Should I push back with Frontier or the card company? Any advice would help.
My family was stuck on a Frontier flight that sat on the tarmac for hours before we were finally deboarded. The flight never took off, and Frontier only reimbursed us for the canceled flight itself. The problem is, they still had to get home — so we ended up buying last-minute tickets from another airline, which were crazy expensive. I filed a claim through my credit card’s travel insurance (since I booked the original flight with that card), but they only covered food and toiletries from the delay, not the new flight. Has anyone had luck getting reimbursed for replacement flights in a situation like this? Should I push back with Frontier or the card company? Any advice would help.
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