Ryanair Delay Compensation: How to Claim Up to €600

Did your Ryanair flight arrive more than 3 hours late — or get cancelled without much warning? You could be owed up to €600 in compensation under EU Regulation 261/2004. Millions of passengers miss out every year simply because they do not know their rights.
This guide explains exactly when you qualify, how much you can claim, and the fastest way to get your money — without paying a penny upfront.
| Quick answer: You can claim Ryanair delay compensation of €250, €400 or €600 depending on flight distance. Your flight must have arrived 3+ hours late or been cancelled with less than 14 days notice, and the cause must not be extraordinary circumstances (e.g. severe weather, airport strikes). Claims must be submitted within 6 years in the UK, 3 years in most EU countries. |
Does EU law actually apply to Ryanair?
Yes. Ryanair is an Irish airline operating within the EU and UK, so it is fully covered by:
- EU Regulation 261/2004 — for flights departing from or arriving at EU airports
- UK261 — the retained UK version of the same regulation, covering flights to/from UK airports post-Brexit
Ryanair cannot opt out of this regulation. It applies automatically to every ticket.
When can you claim Ryanair delay compensation?
You are entitled to compensation when all of the following are true:
1. Your flight was delayed by 3 hours or more at arrival
The clock runs on arrival time at the gate, not departure. If your flight took off 4 hours late but landed only 2 hours 45 minutes late (due to a crew making up time), you technically fall outside the threshold. In practice this is rare, but worth checking your actual arrival time in FlightAware or FlightRadar24.
2. Your flight was cancelled with less than 14 days notice
If Ryanair cancels your flight and tells you fewer than 14 days before departure, you have a right to compensation. If they give you an alternative flight that gets you to your destination within certain time windows, the amount may be reduced.
3. The delay was not caused by extraordinary circumstances
This is where Ryanair will often try to avoid paying. Extraordinary circumstances are events outside the airline’s control that could not have been avoided even if all reasonable measures had been taken. These include:
- Severe weather (storms, blizzards, lightning strikes to the aircraft)
- Air traffic control strikes
- Political unrest or security threats at the airport
- Medical emergencies onboard that require a diversion
These do NOT qualify as extraordinary circumstances, even though Ryanair sometimes claims they do:
- Technical faults with the aircraft (unless caused by a manufacturing defect outside normal maintenance)
- Crew shortages due to staffing issues
- Airport staff industrial action (only the airport strike itself, not a general transport strike)
- Bird strikes (courts have ruled these are foreseeable)
| Insider tip: Always ask Ryanair for the specific technical defect notice (MEL entry or engineering log) if they cite a technical fault. This is your strongest evidence to challenge an extraordinary circumstances refusal. |
Ryanair compensation amounts, how much are you owed?
The amount you can claim depends on the distance of your flight:
| Flight distance | Delay at arrival | Compensation |
| Under 1,500 km | 3+ hours late | €250 |
| 1,500–3,500 km | 3+ hours late | €400 |
| Over 3,500 km | 3–4 hours late | €300 |
| Over 3,500 km | 4+ hours late | €600 |
Examples of common Ryanair routes by distance:
- London Stansted to Dublin — 449 km — €250
- London Stansted to Malaga — 1,840 km — €400
- Dublin to Faro — 1,620 km — €400
- Manchester to Tenerife — 2,950 km — €400
Note: compensation is paid per passenger. A family of four delayed on a London–Malaga route could receive €1,600 in total.
Ryanair compensation vs refund, what is the difference?
These are two separate rights and you can claim both in a cancellation scenario:
- Refund — the full cost of your unused ticket, returned to your original payment method. You are entitled to this if your flight is cancelled regardless of the cause.
- Compensation — the flat-rate payment (€250–€600) under EC261. This is only owed when the cancellation or delay meets the threshold criteria above.
Ryanair sometimes pushes passengers towards vouchers. You are not obliged to accept a voucher — you have a legal right to a cash refund.
How to submit a Ryanair delay compensation claim
There are two main routes:
Option 1: Claim directly through Ryanair
- Log in to your Ryanair account and go to My Trips
- Select the affected booking and choose ‘Compensation claim’
- Fill in the form and upload supporting documents (boarding pass, booking confirmation)
- Submit and wait — Ryanair typically responds within 10 business days
The downside: Ryanair rejects a high percentage of first-time claims, even valid ones. Their initial rejection is often a template response citing extraordinary circumstances.
Option 2: Use a no-win no-fee claims service
A specialist claims company like FlyClaimer handles the entire process on your behalf. You pay nothing upfront — the fee (typically 25–35% + VAT) is only deducted from your compensation if the claim is successful. This route is particularly effective when Ryanair has already rejected your claim directly.
How long does Ryanair compensation take?
Timeline varies considerably:
- Direct claim accepted: 10–20 business days
- Direct claim rejected, then escalated: 3–6 months
- Claims service used (no prior rejection): 4–8 weeks
- Legal action required: 6–18 months
Ryanair is one of the slower major airlines when it comes to paying compensation voluntarily. Using a claims service with legal backing typically shortens the timeline because they send a formal letter before action early in the process.
What documents do you need?
- Booking confirmation email with PNR reference
- Boarding pass (digital or paper)
- Proof of actual arrival time (screenshot from FlightAware is accepted)
- Any correspondence from Ryanair about the delay or cancellation
You do not need the original ticket receipt or a printed boarding pass — digital evidence is fully accepted.
What if Ryanair rejects your claim?
A rejection is not the end. You have several escalation routes:
- Resubmit with additional evidence, particularly the actual arrival time data
- Submit to the National Enforcement Body (NEB) in the country of departure — in the UK this is the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA)
- File a small claims court application — in England and Wales this costs £35–£70 and Ryanair tends to settle before the hearing
- Use a claims management company with legal enforcement powers
FAQ
Can I claim if my Ryanair flight was delayed years ago?
Yes, in most cases. The limitation period is 6 years in England and Wales, 5 years in Scotland, and 3 years in most EU member states. Claims from as far back as 2018–2020 are still being successfully processed in 2026.
Does the 3-hour rule apply to the departure time or arrival time?
Arrival time. Specifically, the time the aircraft doors open at the destination gate. If your flight departed 4 hours late but the crew made up time in the air and you landed only 2 hours 55 minutes late, you do not meet the threshold.
What if Ryanair offered me a voucher, can I still claim cash?
Yes. Accepting a travel voucher does not extinguish your right to compensation under EC261. The two are treated separately. You can still pursue the cash payment even if you already used the voucher for rebooking.
My flight was delayed due to a strike, can I claim?
It depends on which workers were striking. An air traffic control strike (ATC) is usually an extraordinary circumstance that blocks your claim. A Ryanair cabin crew strike is not — courts across Europe have consistently ruled that industrial action by an airline's own staff is within the carrier's control and does not qualify as extraordinary.