How to claim compensation for an overbooked flight
Check how much the airline owes you. It's free and takes 2 minutes.
We help you enforce your passenger rights
The first clue you’re on an overbooked flight is the gate attendant asking for volunteers to take another plane. They’ll usually offer a travel voucher. But the airline may owe more overbooked flight compensation than that.
Denied boarding due to an overbooked flight? You may be eligible for compensation.
Are you eligible for overbooking compensation?
Under EC 261, you are entitled to file a claim for up to €600 cash compensation if…
- The flight took off in the EU (from any airline) or landed in the EU (provided the airline is headquartered in the EU).
- You did not volunteer to surrender your seat in exchange for vouchers or other benefits.
- You were not denied boarding for a reason under your control (e.g. too late at gate or incorrect documentation).
- You encountered these problems on a flight operated no more than three years ago.
- You have not already received compensation for your overbooking from the airline.
Your Rights on Overbooking
Definitions: overbooking and denied boarding
What overbooking means?
Overbooking flights is the practice of selling more tickets than there are seats on a plane. Airlines do this because they expect some passengers won’t show up.
Some estimates put “no-show” passengers between 5% and 15%. When airlines get it wrong, passengers with valid tickets can be denied boarding.
What denied boarding means?
Being denied boarding covers a range of circumstances. If it happens through no fault of your own, laws in the US and EU can ensure compensation. If it’s due to your own fault (missing documents, late at gate, abusive behavior), these laws don’t apply.
Overbooking on EU flights
Europe has strong air passenger rights under regulation EC 261. Passengers can be entitled to up to €600 if denied boarding against their will.
Important points:
- Only involuntary boarding denials are covered. If you volunteer in exchange for benefits, you surrender your right to denied boarding compensation under EC 261.
- If you compromise your own ability to board, you lose your right to compensation (late boarding, missing documents, creating a safety/security issue).
European and many international flights are covered
EC 261 applies to flights within Europe, flights departing from Europe, and flights landing in Europe on a European airline.
| Itinerary | EU air carrier | Non-EU air carrier |
|---|---|---|
| From inside the EU to inside the EU | ✔ Covered | ✔ Covered |
| From inside the EU to outside the EU | ✔ Covered | ✔ Covered |
| From outside the EU to inside the EU | ✔ Covered | ✖ Not covered |
| From outside the EU to outside the EU | ✖ Not covered | ✖ Not covered |
EC 261 also applies in Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and outermost regions.
Compensation for overbooked flights is due immediately once you are denied boarding (at the airport), in addition to being entitled to re-routing.
Overbooking flights in the US
Overbooking is common in the US and there are strong protections. Passengers on international flights from the US could be entitled to up to $2,150.
- Only boarding denials due to overbooking are covered. Airlines must ask for volunteers before bumping passengers.
- Only involuntary denials are covered. If you volunteer, you generally give up your right to compensation under US rules.
- US regulations apply to flights with US carriers between US cities, and international flights originating in the United States.
Overbooking Compensation for Flights
Overbooked flight compensation in Europe (EC 261)
Compensation depends on travel distance and whether the flight is within the EU.
| Distance | Compensation |
|---|---|
| All flights 1,500 km or less | €250 |
| Internal EU flights over 1,500 km | €400 |
| Non-internal EU flights between 1,500 km - 3,500 km | €400 |
| Non-internal EU flights over 3,500 km | €600 |
Other entitlements under EC 261
Obligation to inform passengers of their rights
Airlines must display information on passengers’ rights at their check-in counters in every airport where they operate.
Right to reimbursement or re-routing
If you are denied boarding, you are entitled to either:
- A full or partial refund and a return flight to your point of departure, if needed.
- The earliest possible alternative transport to your final destination.
- A new ticket to your final destination at a later date of your preference (subject to availability).
Transport between airports must be arranged at the expense of the air carrier.
Right to care
Meals and refreshments during the delay, plus communications (two phone calls, telex/fax messages, emails). If overnight accommodation is necessary, a hotel room and transportation to/from the airport.
Upgrading and downgrading
If upgraded, the carrier cannot charge extra. If downgraded, you can get 30%–75% reimbursement of the price you paid.
Further compensation
EC 261 compensation does not affect your right to request further compensation (except where you voluntarily surrendered your reservation). The EC 261 amount may be deducted from additional compensation.
Overbooked flight compensation under US regulations
Compensation depends on the scheduled arrival delay after re-routing and whether your flight is domestic or international.
| Length of delay | 0-1 hours | 1-2 hours | 2-4 hours | 4+ hours |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic | $- | 200% fare (max $1,075) | 400% fare (max $2,150) | 400% fare (max $2,150) |
| International | $- | 200% fare (max $1,075) | 200% fare (max $1,075) | 400% fare (max $2,150) |
If no substitute travel arrangements are made, you are entitled to 400% of the one-way fare (max $2,150) plus any optional fees paid (bags, seat upgrades, etc.).
You’re entitled to cash, so don’t feel obligated to accept travel vouchers.
What to Do If You're Denied Boarding due to Overbooking
If the airline doesn’t let you board when you haven’t done anything wrong, it’s stressful — but you do have rights. Follow these steps at the airport.
- Do not volunteer to give up your seat in exchange for vouchers or perks.
- Hold onto your boarding pass and any other travel documents.
- Ask why you’re being denied boarding.
- Request an alternate flight to your destination (or ask for refund + return flight where applicable).
- Request compensation for your boarding denial (paid immediately at the airport in Europe).
- Ask if the airline will cover your meals and refreshments.
- Ask the airline to provide you with a hotel room if you’re grounded overnight.
- Keep your receipts if the disruption costs you extra money.
- See if your boarding denial is eligible for compensation.
What information should I collect to support my overbooking claim?
- Keep original disrupted-flight documents and any new documents for alternative flights (e-tickets, boarding passes).
- Ask ground crew for information about what caused the issue; take screenshots/photos of written communications.
- Note the actual arrival time at your final destination.
- Take photos of departure boards and any airline communications confirming the disruption.
Can I claim if an airline has been bought out?
If the airline still operates and keeps its original trade name and IATA code, you can claim as normal. If the airline no longer exists, you may not be able to get compensation.
How Indemsy can help you claim
We can submit a claim under EC 261 on your behalf, build your case, and handle back and forth with the airline.
No win, no fee.