EU Flight Rules Put Bags and Payouts Back in Focus

EU air passenger rights are heading for their biggest update in years after negotiators reached a provisional deal on clearer flight compensation and booking rules. The agreement keeps the three-hour delay threshold for payouts and tightens what airlines must show before payment. Once formally approved, the changes are expected to apply in 2027, after more than a decade of talks.
The deal keeps compensation at €250, €400 or €600, depending on distance, when eligible flights are cancelled or arrive more than three hours late. Airlines will have to acknowledge claims straight away and respond within 30 days, either paying or giving a clear reason for refusal. The claim window will be nine months after the disrupted journey.
What Airlines Must Include
The same package also targets the way fares and disruption support are presented, especially on stripped-back tickets. Travellers should see ticket prices with hand luggage included at the start of booking, while airlines may still sell cheaper no-bag fares. The deal also adds:
- clearer disruption notices
- meals after three hours
- internet access and two calls
- hotel cover when an overnight stay is needed
The changes should make short European trips easier to price and plan. Tourists will see the real cost of flying earlier, including hand luggage, instead of finding add-ons near checkout. That is useful for weekend breaks, beach holidays and family visits, where baggage costs, delay care and missed hours can decide whether a trip still works, especially when travel time is limited.
"I’m proud that, after 13 years of negotiations, we reached a landmark agreement to strengthen EU air passenger rights. This modernized framework will deliver certainty, fairness and stronger protection for millions of European air passengers. The agreement strikes a fair balance for our airlines, helping preserve connectivity that is vital to the EU’s internal market and its citizens."
The deal does not promise cheaper flying, and some headline fares may rise once hand luggage appears in the first price. Its main value is transparency: fewer last-minute costs, clearer airline duties during disruption and a firmer route for claims. When the rules start in 2027, people booking EU-covered flights should keep receipts, boarding passes and delay records until the claim window closes.



















