ECAA Flight Compensation: Western Balkans Passenger Rights Explained
If you flew from or to Albania, Serbia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro or Bosnia & Herzegovina, you are protected under the European Common Aviation Area (ECAA) agreement — which gives you essentially the same flight compensation rights as EU passengers. Up to €600 for delays, cancellations and denied boarding. Here is how it works.
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What Is the ECAA and Why Does It Matter?
The European Common Aviation Area (ECAA) is a multilateral aviation treaty between the EU and neighbouring non-EU countries. It creates a unified aviation market with standardised rules covering safety, competition, and — most importantly for passengers — passenger rights.
The core passenger protection framework of EU Regulation 261/2004 has been transposed into national law in each ECAA member country. This means passengers flying from Western Balkans airports have the same fundamental right to claim compensation as passengers flying from Frankfurt or Amsterdam.
Current ECAA members from the Western Balkans:
- Albania — ECAA member, administered by the Albanian Civil Aviation Authority (AAC)
- Serbia — ECAA member, administered by the Civil Aviation Directorate (CAD)
- Kosovo — ECAA member, administered by the Civil Aviation Authority of Kosovo (CAA-K)
- North Macedonia — ECAA member, legislation harmonised with EU passenger rights law
- Montenegro — ECAA member, passenger rights provisions apply
- Bosnia & Herzegovina — ECAA member, passenger rights provisions apply
In plain terms: If your flight departed from Tirana, Belgrade, Pristina, Sarajevo, Skopje or Podgorica, you likely have the same right to claim up to €600 as a passenger flying from Paris or Berlin.
ECAA vs EU261 — What Is the Same and What Differs?
| Rule / provision | EU261 | ECAA (Western Balkans) |
|---|---|---|
| Compensation for 3+ hour delay | ✓ €250–€600 | ✓ Same amounts |
| Compensation for cancellation <14 days | ✓ €250–€600 | ✓ Same amounts |
| Compensation for denied boarding | ✓ €250–€600 | ✓ Same amounts |
| Right to refund or rerouting | ✓ Mandatory | ✓ Mandatory |
| Care and assistance (meals, hotel) | ✓ Mandatory | ✓ Mandatory |
| Extraordinary circumstances exemption | Yes | Yes — same exemption |
| Enforcement consistency | Varies by EU country | Still developing — varies by country |
| ADR / alternative dispute resolution | Available in most EU countries | Available in some ECAA countries |
One real difference: Enforcement infrastructure is less developed in some Western Balkans countries. Airlines may be slower to pay voluntarily. This makes using a specialist no-win, no-fee service more valuable for ECAA claims.
Compensation Amounts for ECAA Routes
| Total journey distance | Delay 3+ hrs or cancellation | Denied boarding |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 1,500 km | €250 | €250 |
| 1,500 km – 3,500 km | €400 | €400 |
| Over 3,500 km | €300–€600 | €600 |
Country-by-Country Guide
Albania
Albania’s national law incorporates ECAA passenger rights. Tirana is the region’s fastest-growing airport with strong Wizz Air, Air Albania, Ryanair and easyJet coverage.
Serbia
Serbia’s Civil Aviation Directorate accepts passenger complaints on qualifying routes. Belgrade is the Balkans’ largest hub with broad EU carrier coverage.
Kosovo
Kosovo is a full ECAA signatory. Wizz Air operates many routes from PRN that regularly experience delays — a significant market for claims.
North Macedonia
North Macedonia’s Civil Aviation Agency confirms national legislation is harmonised with EU passenger rights law. Growing European connections from Skopje.
Montenegro
ECAA member. Both Podgorica and Tivat (the summer tourist gateway) are covered. Claims volume increases significantly in summer with charter operations.
Bosnia & Herzegovina
ECAA signatory. Regular connections to European cities via Wizz Air, Austrian Airlines and Turkish Airlines. Claims escalate to the BiH Directorate of Civil Aviation.
Common Routes and Your Compensation Entitlement
Diaspora routes: Many Balkans passengers fly connecting itineraries through Vienna, Frankfurt or Zurich to the US, Gulf or Australia. When the total journey exceeds 3,500 km and you arrive 4+ hours late, the maximum €600 compensation applies — even if the disruption started on the short Balkans leg.
Flying from Tirana, Belgrade, Pristina or Sarajevo?
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How to Claim on an ECAA Route
Document everything at the airport
Keep your boarding pass, booking confirmation and any airline notifications. Note actual departure and arrival times. Photograph airport boards showing your flight status.
Submit a formal written claim to the airline
Cite the applicable ECAA passenger rights regulation. Many airlines accept ECAA claims through their standard EU261 online forms — the legal basis is identical.
Escalate to the national authority if rejected
For Albanian departures: AAC. For Serbian: CAD. For Kosovo: CAA-K. For North Macedonia: the Civil Aviation Agency. Include original claim, rejection, and all supporting documents.
Use a specialist compensation service
ECAA claims can be more complex because local enforcement is still maturing. A no-win, no-fee service experienced in ECAA routes handles everything — including escalation — on your behalf.
Official enforcement contacts
Serbia Civil Aviation Directorate — Passenger Complaints
Civil Aviation Agency of North Macedonia — Passengers
European Commission — ECAA Member Status
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the ECAA?
The European Common Aviation Area is a multilateral agreement extending the EU’s aviation framework — including passenger rights — to non-EU countries including all Western Balkans nations. It creates unified aviation rules across the region.
Is ECAA the same as EU261?
ECAA aligns core passenger protections with EU261 but the two are not identical instruments. In practice the compensation amounts (€250–€600), thresholds (3-hour delay, 14-day cancellation notice) and care rights are mirrored. Enforcement processes vary by country.
Can I claim from Tirana, Belgrade or Pristina?
Yes. Flights departing from TIA, BEG and PRN are covered under ECAA passenger rights rules. The same compensation amounts as EU261 apply.
Which airlines on ECAA routes are subject to these rules?
All airlines departing from ECAA airports — including Wizz Air, Ryanair, easyJet, Air Albania, Air Serbia, Turkish Airlines, Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines — are subject to the applicable national passenger rights law.
Does ECAA cover flights from Kosovo?
Yes. Kosovo is a full ECAA signatory. Passengers departing from Pristina International (PRN) are protected, and Kosovo’s Civil Aviation Authority oversees compliance.