Flight compensation with agentMy flight is changed to include an overnight layover, can I claim compensation...
Use 1 9 6 2 in this order to make 75
How do you play "tenth" chords on the guitar?
Housemarks (superimposed & combined letters, heraldry)
To what extent do precedents in Westminster systems apply in other countries that use it?
Does the Nuka-Cola bottler actually generate nuka cola?
Is Lambda Calculus purely syntactic?
Should I put programming books I wrote a few years ago on my resume?
Can you make an identity from this product?
How to befriend someone who doesn't like to talk?
NUL delimited variable
bash vs. zsh: What are the practical differences?
Do empty drive bays need to be filled?
Does a (nice) centerless group always have a centerless profinite completion?
If there's something that implicates the president why is there then a national security issue? (John Dowd)
Command of files and size
Assigning function to function pointer, const argument correctness?
What differences exist between adamantine and adamantite in all editions of D&D?
How durable are silver inlays on a blade?
Do you have to have figures when playing D&D?
Should I refuse to be named as co-author of a low quality paper?
Why ambiguous grammars are bad?
Rail-to-rail op-amp only reaches 90% of VCC, works sometimes, not everytime
Wizard clothing for warm weather
Make Gimbap cutter
Flight compensation with agent
My flight is changed to include an overnight layover, can I claim compensation from airline?Compensation for denied boarding due to baggage delayClaiming EC261 compensation in another member stateCompensation for an EU flightHow long do I have to wait to receive a compensation from Turkish Airlines?EasyJet ignoring EC261 compensation claim—what recourse do I have?Flight Cancellations and DelaysAirline caused missed international flight. What are my options?Can an airline separate a minor from his/her legal guardian?How to proceed with a compensation claim against an airline
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}
I had recently traveled to London from Warsaw with LOT Polish Airlines and had connecting flight in Zurich. Flight was delayed by 40 min and because of which I was denied boarding on my connecting flight. Airline offered me another flight which was after 5 hours and gave me one food coupon. I reached my destination more than 6 hours later than scheduled. I am trying to get compensation from the Airline.
I have contacted the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA, which is the national EC261 enforcement body) but they replied with some complicated procedure and lot of legal jargon. Hence, I am thinking of applying for this compensation through some agent. Few of my colleagues suggested me few names like AirHelp, flightright, refund.me etc. However, I am little bit unsure about their authenticity, procedure and reviews. If anyone of you used such services, can you please guide me regarding this? Or suggest some alternative way without getting into large legal process.
air-travel legal compensation
add a comment |
I had recently traveled to London from Warsaw with LOT Polish Airlines and had connecting flight in Zurich. Flight was delayed by 40 min and because of which I was denied boarding on my connecting flight. Airline offered me another flight which was after 5 hours and gave me one food coupon. I reached my destination more than 6 hours later than scheduled. I am trying to get compensation from the Airline.
I have contacted the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA, which is the national EC261 enforcement body) but they replied with some complicated procedure and lot of legal jargon. Hence, I am thinking of applying for this compensation through some agent. Few of my colleagues suggested me few names like AirHelp, flightright, refund.me etc. However, I am little bit unsure about their authenticity, procedure and reviews. If anyone of you used such services, can you please guide me regarding this? Or suggest some alternative way without getting into large legal process.
air-travel legal compensation
Where did you fly to Zürich from, and on which airline? Have you contacted the airline directly about compensation?
– Henning Makholm
8 hours ago
@HenningMakholm, I have added the details. I have contacted their helpdesk but they just apologized fro the inconvenience and did not comment on any compensation.
– Dexter
7 hours ago
add a comment |
I had recently traveled to London from Warsaw with LOT Polish Airlines and had connecting flight in Zurich. Flight was delayed by 40 min and because of which I was denied boarding on my connecting flight. Airline offered me another flight which was after 5 hours and gave me one food coupon. I reached my destination more than 6 hours later than scheduled. I am trying to get compensation from the Airline.
I have contacted the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA, which is the national EC261 enforcement body) but they replied with some complicated procedure and lot of legal jargon. Hence, I am thinking of applying for this compensation through some agent. Few of my colleagues suggested me few names like AirHelp, flightright, refund.me etc. However, I am little bit unsure about their authenticity, procedure and reviews. If anyone of you used such services, can you please guide me regarding this? Or suggest some alternative way without getting into large legal process.
air-travel legal compensation
I had recently traveled to London from Warsaw with LOT Polish Airlines and had connecting flight in Zurich. Flight was delayed by 40 min and because of which I was denied boarding on my connecting flight. Airline offered me another flight which was after 5 hours and gave me one food coupon. I reached my destination more than 6 hours later than scheduled. I am trying to get compensation from the Airline.
I have contacted the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA, which is the national EC261 enforcement body) but they replied with some complicated procedure and lot of legal jargon. Hence, I am thinking of applying for this compensation through some agent. Few of my colleagues suggested me few names like AirHelp, flightright, refund.me etc. However, I am little bit unsure about their authenticity, procedure and reviews. If anyone of you used such services, can you please guide me regarding this? Or suggest some alternative way without getting into large legal process.
air-travel legal compensation
air-travel legal compensation
edited 7 hours ago
Dexter
asked 9 hours ago
DexterDexter
23018
23018
Where did you fly to Zürich from, and on which airline? Have you contacted the airline directly about compensation?
– Henning Makholm
8 hours ago
@HenningMakholm, I have added the details. I have contacted their helpdesk but they just apologized fro the inconvenience and did not comment on any compensation.
– Dexter
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Where did you fly to Zürich from, and on which airline? Have you contacted the airline directly about compensation?
– Henning Makholm
8 hours ago
@HenningMakholm, I have added the details. I have contacted their helpdesk but they just apologized fro the inconvenience and did not comment on any compensation.
– Dexter
7 hours ago
Where did you fly to Zürich from, and on which airline? Have you contacted the airline directly about compensation?
– Henning Makholm
8 hours ago
Where did you fly to Zürich from, and on which airline? Have you contacted the airline directly about compensation?
– Henning Makholm
8 hours ago
@HenningMakholm, I have added the details. I have contacted their helpdesk but they just apologized fro the inconvenience and did not comment on any compensation.
– Dexter
7 hours ago
@HenningMakholm, I have added the details. I have contacted their helpdesk but they just apologized fro the inconvenience and did not comment on any compensation.
– Dexter
7 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I'm assuming both flights are on the same ticket. (If they were not, you're out of luck, and in fact you were lucky to be rebooked on a later flight at all).
You're barking up a slightly wrong tree by going to the Swiss national enforcement body. Since both the airline and your point of departure are Polish, it would more relevant for the Polish enforcement body to get involved. But ultimately there's not a lot they can do. (They can't order the airline to compensate you, or fine them for not paying up, for example).
What you should do first is to explicitly demand your EC261 compensation from the airline. What you write in the question sounds like you were just telling their customer service "I'm unhappy about this; what can you do for me?", and you were brushed off. You need to be telling them, "You owe me 250 euro in delay compensation. Please send them to me on such-and-such account."
(EC261 fixes the compensation for a delay of more than 3 hours at your final destination on a journey of less than 1500 km to 250 euro. Warsaw to London is just below that limit at 1474 km, or less if the London end was not Heathrow).
If at that point they still won't pay, you're still owed the 250 euro, but you may need to take the airline to court to force them to pay. That's where the agencies you list come in -- they're specialized law offices who in exchange for a cut of the compensation will write a professional-sounding letter to the airline on your behalf, and prosecute a lawsuit for you if that doesn't work. You can also hire a traditional lawyer to do it for you, though that will probably be more expensive than one of the compensation mills. And if the case is really clear cut (like it sounds like yours is), you might be able to file the case yourself through whatever small-claims procedure Polish courts offer.
But the first step is to make an explicit demand.
Of course the agencies will also be happy to make that initial demand for you in exchange for their usual cut, but that's a waste of good money.
– Henning Makholm
7 hours ago
Thank you ! I will try contacting them again. Are those agencies I mentioned trustworthy?
– Dexter
6 hours ago
@Dexter: I don't know any of the specific names. If I were to use one myself I would verify that the one I chose has a license to practice law in the jurisdiction I need, and let that be "trustworthy" enough to hand a 250-euro cases.
– Henning Makholm
6 hours ago
Does the routing via Zurich affect the 1500 km?
– Harper
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f140102%2fflight-compensation-with-agent%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I'm assuming both flights are on the same ticket. (If they were not, you're out of luck, and in fact you were lucky to be rebooked on a later flight at all).
You're barking up a slightly wrong tree by going to the Swiss national enforcement body. Since both the airline and your point of departure are Polish, it would more relevant for the Polish enforcement body to get involved. But ultimately there's not a lot they can do. (They can't order the airline to compensate you, or fine them for not paying up, for example).
What you should do first is to explicitly demand your EC261 compensation from the airline. What you write in the question sounds like you were just telling their customer service "I'm unhappy about this; what can you do for me?", and you were brushed off. You need to be telling them, "You owe me 250 euro in delay compensation. Please send them to me on such-and-such account."
(EC261 fixes the compensation for a delay of more than 3 hours at your final destination on a journey of less than 1500 km to 250 euro. Warsaw to London is just below that limit at 1474 km, or less if the London end was not Heathrow).
If at that point they still won't pay, you're still owed the 250 euro, but you may need to take the airline to court to force them to pay. That's where the agencies you list come in -- they're specialized law offices who in exchange for a cut of the compensation will write a professional-sounding letter to the airline on your behalf, and prosecute a lawsuit for you if that doesn't work. You can also hire a traditional lawyer to do it for you, though that will probably be more expensive than one of the compensation mills. And if the case is really clear cut (like it sounds like yours is), you might be able to file the case yourself through whatever small-claims procedure Polish courts offer.
But the first step is to make an explicit demand.
Of course the agencies will also be happy to make that initial demand for you in exchange for their usual cut, but that's a waste of good money.
– Henning Makholm
7 hours ago
Thank you ! I will try contacting them again. Are those agencies I mentioned trustworthy?
– Dexter
6 hours ago
@Dexter: I don't know any of the specific names. If I were to use one myself I would verify that the one I chose has a license to practice law in the jurisdiction I need, and let that be "trustworthy" enough to hand a 250-euro cases.
– Henning Makholm
6 hours ago
Does the routing via Zurich affect the 1500 km?
– Harper
1 hour ago
add a comment |
I'm assuming both flights are on the same ticket. (If they were not, you're out of luck, and in fact you were lucky to be rebooked on a later flight at all).
You're barking up a slightly wrong tree by going to the Swiss national enforcement body. Since both the airline and your point of departure are Polish, it would more relevant for the Polish enforcement body to get involved. But ultimately there's not a lot they can do. (They can't order the airline to compensate you, or fine them for not paying up, for example).
What you should do first is to explicitly demand your EC261 compensation from the airline. What you write in the question sounds like you were just telling their customer service "I'm unhappy about this; what can you do for me?", and you were brushed off. You need to be telling them, "You owe me 250 euro in delay compensation. Please send them to me on such-and-such account."
(EC261 fixes the compensation for a delay of more than 3 hours at your final destination on a journey of less than 1500 km to 250 euro. Warsaw to London is just below that limit at 1474 km, or less if the London end was not Heathrow).
If at that point they still won't pay, you're still owed the 250 euro, but you may need to take the airline to court to force them to pay. That's where the agencies you list come in -- they're specialized law offices who in exchange for a cut of the compensation will write a professional-sounding letter to the airline on your behalf, and prosecute a lawsuit for you if that doesn't work. You can also hire a traditional lawyer to do it for you, though that will probably be more expensive than one of the compensation mills. And if the case is really clear cut (like it sounds like yours is), you might be able to file the case yourself through whatever small-claims procedure Polish courts offer.
But the first step is to make an explicit demand.
Of course the agencies will also be happy to make that initial demand for you in exchange for their usual cut, but that's a waste of good money.
– Henning Makholm
7 hours ago
Thank you ! I will try contacting them again. Are those agencies I mentioned trustworthy?
– Dexter
6 hours ago
@Dexter: I don't know any of the specific names. If I were to use one myself I would verify that the one I chose has a license to practice law in the jurisdiction I need, and let that be "trustworthy" enough to hand a 250-euro cases.
– Henning Makholm
6 hours ago
Does the routing via Zurich affect the 1500 km?
– Harper
1 hour ago
add a comment |
I'm assuming both flights are on the same ticket. (If they were not, you're out of luck, and in fact you were lucky to be rebooked on a later flight at all).
You're barking up a slightly wrong tree by going to the Swiss national enforcement body. Since both the airline and your point of departure are Polish, it would more relevant for the Polish enforcement body to get involved. But ultimately there's not a lot they can do. (They can't order the airline to compensate you, or fine them for not paying up, for example).
What you should do first is to explicitly demand your EC261 compensation from the airline. What you write in the question sounds like you were just telling their customer service "I'm unhappy about this; what can you do for me?", and you were brushed off. You need to be telling them, "You owe me 250 euro in delay compensation. Please send them to me on such-and-such account."
(EC261 fixes the compensation for a delay of more than 3 hours at your final destination on a journey of less than 1500 km to 250 euro. Warsaw to London is just below that limit at 1474 km, or less if the London end was not Heathrow).
If at that point they still won't pay, you're still owed the 250 euro, but you may need to take the airline to court to force them to pay. That's where the agencies you list come in -- they're specialized law offices who in exchange for a cut of the compensation will write a professional-sounding letter to the airline on your behalf, and prosecute a lawsuit for you if that doesn't work. You can also hire a traditional lawyer to do it for you, though that will probably be more expensive than one of the compensation mills. And if the case is really clear cut (like it sounds like yours is), you might be able to file the case yourself through whatever small-claims procedure Polish courts offer.
But the first step is to make an explicit demand.
I'm assuming both flights are on the same ticket. (If they were not, you're out of luck, and in fact you were lucky to be rebooked on a later flight at all).
You're barking up a slightly wrong tree by going to the Swiss national enforcement body. Since both the airline and your point of departure are Polish, it would more relevant for the Polish enforcement body to get involved. But ultimately there's not a lot they can do. (They can't order the airline to compensate you, or fine them for not paying up, for example).
What you should do first is to explicitly demand your EC261 compensation from the airline. What you write in the question sounds like you were just telling their customer service "I'm unhappy about this; what can you do for me?", and you were brushed off. You need to be telling them, "You owe me 250 euro in delay compensation. Please send them to me on such-and-such account."
(EC261 fixes the compensation for a delay of more than 3 hours at your final destination on a journey of less than 1500 km to 250 euro. Warsaw to London is just below that limit at 1474 km, or less if the London end was not Heathrow).
If at that point they still won't pay, you're still owed the 250 euro, but you may need to take the airline to court to force them to pay. That's where the agencies you list come in -- they're specialized law offices who in exchange for a cut of the compensation will write a professional-sounding letter to the airline on your behalf, and prosecute a lawsuit for you if that doesn't work. You can also hire a traditional lawyer to do it for you, though that will probably be more expensive than one of the compensation mills. And if the case is really clear cut (like it sounds like yours is), you might be able to file the case yourself through whatever small-claims procedure Polish courts offer.
But the first step is to make an explicit demand.
edited 7 hours ago
answered 7 hours ago
Henning MakholmHenning Makholm
48.4k8118178
48.4k8118178
Of course the agencies will also be happy to make that initial demand for you in exchange for their usual cut, but that's a waste of good money.
– Henning Makholm
7 hours ago
Thank you ! I will try contacting them again. Are those agencies I mentioned trustworthy?
– Dexter
6 hours ago
@Dexter: I don't know any of the specific names. If I were to use one myself I would verify that the one I chose has a license to practice law in the jurisdiction I need, and let that be "trustworthy" enough to hand a 250-euro cases.
– Henning Makholm
6 hours ago
Does the routing via Zurich affect the 1500 km?
– Harper
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Of course the agencies will also be happy to make that initial demand for you in exchange for their usual cut, but that's a waste of good money.
– Henning Makholm
7 hours ago
Thank you ! I will try contacting them again. Are those agencies I mentioned trustworthy?
– Dexter
6 hours ago
@Dexter: I don't know any of the specific names. If I were to use one myself I would verify that the one I chose has a license to practice law in the jurisdiction I need, and let that be "trustworthy" enough to hand a 250-euro cases.
– Henning Makholm
6 hours ago
Does the routing via Zurich affect the 1500 km?
– Harper
1 hour ago
Of course the agencies will also be happy to make that initial demand for you in exchange for their usual cut, but that's a waste of good money.
– Henning Makholm
7 hours ago
Of course the agencies will also be happy to make that initial demand for you in exchange for their usual cut, but that's a waste of good money.
– Henning Makholm
7 hours ago
Thank you ! I will try contacting them again. Are those agencies I mentioned trustworthy?
– Dexter
6 hours ago
Thank you ! I will try contacting them again. Are those agencies I mentioned trustworthy?
– Dexter
6 hours ago
@Dexter: I don't know any of the specific names. If I were to use one myself I would verify that the one I chose has a license to practice law in the jurisdiction I need, and let that be "trustworthy" enough to hand a 250-euro cases.
– Henning Makholm
6 hours ago
@Dexter: I don't know any of the specific names. If I were to use one myself I would verify that the one I chose has a license to practice law in the jurisdiction I need, and let that be "trustworthy" enough to hand a 250-euro cases.
– Henning Makholm
6 hours ago
Does the routing via Zurich affect the 1500 km?
– Harper
1 hour ago
Does the routing via Zurich affect the 1500 km?
– Harper
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f140102%2fflight-compensation-with-agent%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Where did you fly to Zürich from, and on which airline? Have you contacted the airline directly about compensation?
– Henning Makholm
8 hours ago
@HenningMakholm, I have added the details. I have contacted their helpdesk but they just apologized fro the inconvenience and did not comment on any compensation.
– Dexter
7 hours ago