Airline Strike Compensation

Did Your Flight Get Delayed or Cancelled Because of an Airline Strike?
You Are Legally Entitled Up to £1,040 Per Couple.

Airlines routinely reject valid claims, but under UK261 and EU261 you are legally entitled to compensation. We fight to get you every penny you are owed.

Check Your Eligibility, Takes 60 Seconds

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It takes 1 minute
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£1,040 per couple
No Win, No Fee

Can I Claim Compensation for a Strike-Related Flight Disruption?

Yes, but only in specific circumstances. Not every strike entitles you to compensation, and airlines frequently exploit this confusion to avoid paying out. Understanding the distinction is the single most important thing you can do.

Under UK Regulation 261/2004 (which mirrors the EU's EC 261/2004 and remains in full force in Great Britain post-Brexit), airlines are legally required to compensate passengers when a flight disruption is within their own control. Crucially, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) confirmed in its landmark 2018 ruling, and reaffirmed in 2021, that strikes by the airline's own staff are the airline's responsibility, not an "extraordinary circumstance" that lets them off the hook.

In plain terms: if the airline's pilots, cabin crew, engineers, or ground staff go on strike, the airline owes you money.

Am I eligible? Check these conditions:

  • Your flight was disrupted due to an airline staff strike (pilots, cabin crew, engineers, or directly employed ground staff)
  • Your flight departed from the UK or EU, or arrived in the UK/EU on a UK or EU-based airline
  • Your flight was either delayed by 3 or more hours at your final destination, or cancelled with less than 14 days' notice
  • If you accepted a replacement flight, your new arrival time was significantly later than originally scheduled
  • The disruption occurred within the last 6 years

Not sure? Our free compensation checker will tell you in under 1 minute, no legal knowledge required.

Which Strikes Qualify, and Which Do Not?

This is where most passengers, and even some claim companies, get it wrong. The rule is simple: if the airline controls the striking workers, you can claim. If it does not, you cannot.

Strike Eligibility at a Glance

Type of StrikeWho Is StrikingEligible?Why
Airline staff strikePilots, cabin crew, engineers, airline ground staffYes, claim nowThe airline is responsible for its own employees and internal labour disputes
Union strike targeting airline managementAirline-specific union acting against airline operationsYes, claim nowDirectly involves the airline's workforce
Airport security staff strikeAirport-employed security personnelNoNot under the airline's control, extraordinary circumstance
Baggage handler strikeAirport or third-party baggage handling staffNoThird-party provider, outside airline's responsibility
Air traffic control (ATC) strikeAir traffic controllers (government or NATS)NoManaged by government authorities, outside the airline's control
Border control or customs strikePassport control or customs officersNoGovernment employees, extraordinary circumstance
Ground handling company strikeIndependent, non-airline ground handling contractorsNoThird-party provider, not the airline's liability
Catering or cleaning service strikeExternal service providersNoExternal to the airline's direct operations

Important: Airlines routinely misclassify their own staff strikes as "extraordinary circumstances" to avoid paying compensation. If an airline tells you their staff strike was beyond their control, do not accept this without challenge. Air Travel Claim will dispute this for you at no upfront cost.

What the Law Actually Says

  • ECJ, C-22/11 (4 October 2012): Airlines cannot invoke extraordinary circumstances for events whose resolution is within their own control. Cancellations triggered before or after the official strike period can still qualify if the disruption is a direct consequence of the strike.
  • ECJ, 2018 ruling: Disruptions caused by airline employee strikes qualify for compensation because the airline is held responsible for the behaviour of its own staff.
  • ECJ, C-74/19 (11 June 2020): Before claiming extraordinary circumstances, airlines must prove they took all reasonable measures, including rebooking on other airlines or alternative transport. Failure to do so invalidates the exemption.

This means that even if your flight was cancelled the day before the strike officially began, or the day after it ended, you may still have a valid claim if the disruption can be traced back to that strike.

Exactly How Much Compensation Am I Owed?

The amount you are owed is set by law and depends on the distance of your flight, not the ticket price. Regardless of what you paid for your ticket, the compensation entitlement is identical.

Compensation for a Delayed Flight

You are entitled to compensation if you arrived at your final destination 3 or more hours late due to an airline staff strike.

Flight DistanceExample RouteCompensation Amount
Up to 1,500 kmLondon – Edinburgh, London – Amsterdam£220
1,500 km – 3,500 kmLondon – Athens, London – Marrakech£350
Over 3,500 kmLondon – New York, London – Dubai, London – Tokyo£520

Compensation for a Cancelled Flight

If your flight was cancelled due to an airline staff strike and you were notified less than 14 days before departure, you are entitled to compensation based on your flight distance:

DistanceCompensation
All flights under 1,500 kmUp to £220 per person
Internal EU flights over 1,500 kmUp to £350 per person
Non-internal EU flights between 1,500 - 3,500 kmUp to £350 per person
Non-internal EU flights over 3,500 kmUp to £520 per person

Compensation for Denied Boarding

If the airline denied you boarding, for instance, because your seat was reallocated to a passenger displaced by the strike, you are entitled to the same compensation amounts as a cancelled flight, based on your flight distance and any delay to your final arrival.

No win, no fee: Air Travel Claim only charges a commission if we successfully recover your compensation. If we don't win, you pay nothing.

Your Immediate Rights at the Airport

Whether or not you are entitled to financial compensation, you have a separate and immediate Right to Care from the moment your flight is significantly delayed or cancelled. The airline must provide this regardless of the cause of the disruption, even for extraordinary circumstances where no financial compensation is owed.

What the airline must provide, and when:

If your flight is delayed by 2 hours or more (short-haul, up to 1,500 km):

  • Free meals and refreshments appropriate to the waiting time
  • Two free telephone calls, emails, or fax messages

If your flight is delayed by 3 hours or more (medium-haul, 1,500–3,500 km):

  • Free meals and refreshments
  • Two free telephone calls, emails, or fax messages

If your flight is delayed by 4 hours or more (long-haul, over 3,500 km):

  • Free meals and refreshments
  • Two free telephone calls, emails, or fax messages

If your delay extends overnight:

  • Free hotel accommodation
  • Free transport between the airport and your hotel

If your flight is delayed by 5 hours or more, or cancelled:

  • The right to a full refund of your original ticket price, even if you have already begun your journey
  • OR a replacement flight to your destination at the earliest opportunity
  • OR a later replacement flight at a date that suits you

Critical: If the airline fails to provide meals, accommodation, or transport that they were legally obliged to offer, keep all receipts. You can claim these expenses back on top of your compensation.

Step-by-Step: How to Make a Strike Compensation Claim

1

Check whether you are eligible

Use our free eligibility checker to confirm your flight is covered and your disruption qualifies. It takes less than 60 seconds and requires no legal knowledge.

2

Gather your documents

You will need: your booking confirmation or e-ticket, your boarding pass (digital or paper), any written communication from the airline about the disruption (texts, emails, gate announcements), and receipts for any expenses you incurred as a result of the strike. If you no longer have your boarding pass, your booking reference is often sufficient to start a claim.

3

Record the reason for the disruption

Save any written communications from the airline stating the reason for the cancellation or delay. Take photos of departure board notices and gate announcements at the time. This is important because airlines may later cite extraordinary circumstances, and having the stated reason documented upfront helps challenge any unjustified rejection.

4

Note your actual arrival time

Record or photograph the time your plane's door opened at your final destination. It is your arrival time, not your departure time, that determines your compensation entitlement.

5

Do not sign anything that waives your rights

Some airlines offer vouchers or low-value settlements in exchange for signing away your right to full compensation. Do not sign unless you are certain the amount matches your full legal entitlement. If in doubt, contact Air Travel Claim before signing anything.

6

Submit your claim through Air Travel Claim

Let Air Travel Claim handle everything on your behalf. We write to the airline, assess their response, challenge any unjustified rejection, and escalate to legal action if necessary. We charge no fee unless we win.

In the majority of cases, airlines settle without the need for legal action, and you can expect to receive your compensation within a few weeks to a few months of your claim being submitted. If the airline disputes or ignores your claim, Air Travel Claim handles everything that follows, including legal action through specialist aviation solicitors if necessary. There is no upfront cost to you at any stage.

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It takes 1 minute
All airlines
£1,040 per couple
No Win, No Fee

Claiming for Past Strikes: How Far Back Can You Go?

Further than you might think.

You have 6 years from the date of the disruption to make a claim. This means that if your flight was disrupted by an airline staff strike within this window, you can still make a claim today, even if it happened years ago.

The ECJ ruling that confirmed airline staff strikes qualify for compensation also applies retrospectively. If your flight was disrupted by an airline staff strike in 2019 or later, your claim is almost certainly still valid.

Don't assume your claim has expired. Many passengers are surprised to learn that disruptions from several years ago are still claimable. Our free compensation checker will confirm your eligibility instantly.

Connecting Flights and Missed Onward Journeys

If a strike-related delay on your first flight caused you to miss a connecting flight, your rights depend on how your journey was booked.

Booked as a single itinerary (one booking reference):

If both legs were on a single booking, regardless of whether they were operated by different airlines, the airline operating the first leg is liable for the entire journey. It must:

  • Arrange alternative transport to get you to your final destination
  • Provide care (meals, accommodation) during any extended wait
  • Pay compensation based on the delay to your final destination, not your original connection point

The compensation amount is calculated on the total distance of your entire journey, meaning a missed long-haul connection could entitle you to up to £520.

Booked as separate tickets:

If you booked each leg independently, you have separate rights for each flight. A delay or cancellation on the first ticket does not automatically give you rights against the airline operating the second leg, you would need to claim for each flight individually. However, if the airline on the first leg was responsible for making you miss your second flight, you may still be able to recover additional costs.

Not sure how your journey was booked? Air Travel Claim will assess your entire itinerary and identify every claim available to you.

Package Holiday Affected by a Strike?

If you were travelling on a package holiday, where your flights and accommodation were booked together through a tour operator, you have additional rights on top of your standard air passenger protections.

What you are entitled to as a package holidaymaker:

  • Alternative transport: Your tour operator, not just the airline, is obliged to arrange alternative transport to get you to your destination at the earliest opportunity.
  • Price reduction: If the strike causes significant delays that shorten your trip, you can demand a proportionate reduction in the total price you paid for the package.
  • Reimbursement for costs you incur: If your tour operator fails to arrange alternative transport, you have the right to make your own arrangements and bill the proven costs back to the operator.
  • Care and assistance: Airlines remain obliged to provide meals, accommodation, and transfers even on package holidays, this obligation sits with the airline independently of any tour operator responsibility.
  • Compensation under UK261: Your financial compensation claim against the airline is entirely separate from any claim against your tour operator. You may be entitled to both.

Important: Do not let tour operators tell you that your only recourse is through them. Your EU/UK passenger rights apply directly against the airline, regardless of how your holiday was packaged.

How Air Travel Claim Helps You

Making a strike compensation claim directly with an airline is time-consuming, frustrating, and often fruitless. Airlines have dedicated teams whose job is to minimise payouts. As the UK's number one flight delay claims management company, Air Travel Claim levels the playing field.

What we do

  • We check your eligibility instantly, for free, in under 60 seconds
  • We draft and submit your claim to the airline on your behalf
  • We assess any rejection and challenge it if it is unjustified
  • We escalate to legal proceedings where necessary, covering all costs
  • We keep you updated at every stage via your online account

Our fees

No win, no fee. If we do not recover your compensation, you pay nothing, ever. Our fee is deducted from your payout only if we succeed. Members of our VIP Club pay no fees at all. You can read more about our fees in our Terms and Conditions.

Why passengers choose Air Travel Claim

No financial risk.

We cover all legal costs if your case goes to court.

Expert knowledge.

Our team understands the tactics airlines use to delay and deny claims.

Hassle-free.

You submit your details once. We handle everything else.

Transparent.

You can track the progress of your case in real time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a flight strike an extraordinary circumstance?

It depends on who is striking. Under UK and EU law, airline staff strikes are not considered extraordinary circumstances, the airline is held responsible for its own employees. This was definitively confirmed by the European Court of Justice. However, strikes by airport staff, air traffic control, or other third parties that the airline cannot control are considered extraordinary circumstances, meaning no financial compensation is owed (though the right to care, meals, accommodation, etc., still applies).