MEL_Traveller
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2005
- Posts
- 29,944
Ok. Strange that the extraordinary circumstances exclusion applies to one type of consumer rights but not the other.
Based on what @Pushka says it seems easy to get the refund?! And find a suitable alternative seems easy enough.
I guess it comes down to the minimum level of protection. You have your underlying contract, to get from A to B. If something happens, the airline still needs to get you from A to B or refund you, extraordinary circumstances or not.
The compensation is for the inconvenience, to protect passengers from airlines cancelling flights due to low bookings, and to allow you to make alternative arrangements at short notice. However, there will be some situations where the cancellation or delay is completely outside the airline's control, and it would be unfair to make them pay compensation.
Refunds are a bit tricky at the moment. Some countries have suspended the requirement for a refund, allegedly in breach of EU law. They have said airlines can offer a voucher. For airlines still offering refunds, some are quick, but others are really dragging their feet. Picking up on Pushka's point, this can also impact chargebacks, and your ability to do one. We saw with Virgin for example that many credit card companies (not all), refused to refund even though VA went into liquidation and cancelled their flights.