KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Compensation
Claim up to €600 for delayed, cancelled or overbooked KLM flights
Was your KLM flight delayed or cancelled?
Check your eligibility in under 60 seconds — no win, no fee.
About KLM Royal Dutch Airlines
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines (IATA: KL) is the flag carrier of the Netherlands and the world's oldest airline still operating under its original name, having been founded in 1919. Its primary hub is Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (AMS), one of Europe's busiest connecting airports. KLM is a subsidiary of the Air France–KLM group and a member of the SkyTeam alliance, connecting passengers to a vast global network across Europe, the Americas, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.
KLM's frequent flyer programme is Flying Blue, shared with Air France and other SkyTeam partners. As an EU-registered carrier, KLM passengers benefit from some of the broadest protections available under EC 261/2004 — covering not only flights departing from the EU but also flights arriving into the EU on KLM from outside.
Fleet and Key Facts
| Fleet size | ~189 aircraft (mainline + KLM Cityhopper) |
| Main hub | Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (AMS) |
| Founded | 1919, Amstelveen, Netherlands |
| Alliance | SkyTeam |
| Parent group | Air France–KLM |
| Destinations | 160+ in 90+ countries |
| Aircraft types | Boeing 777-200ER · 777-300ER · Boeing 787-9 · 787-10 · Airbus A330-200 · A330-300 · Boeing 737 · Airbus A321neo · Embraer E-Jets (Cityhopper) |
| IATA code | KL |
| Official website | www.klm.com |
How EC 261/2004 Applies to KLM Flights
KLM is an EU-registered carrier based in the Netherlands, so EC 261/2004 applies broadly — both to flights departing from the EU and to flights arriving into the EU on KLM from outside. This gives KLM passengers wider protection than passengers travelling on non-EU carriers such as Emirates or United Airlines.
| Flight scenario |
Regulation |
Compensation for 3h+ delay? |
| EU airport → anywhere (KLM or any airline) |
EC 261/2004 |
Yes — up to €600 |
| Non-EU airport → EU airport (KLM) |
EC 261/2004 (EU carrier rule) |
Yes — up to €600 |
| UK airport → anywhere (KLM) |
UK261 |
Yes — up to £520 |
| Non-EU, non-UK → non-EU/UK (KLM) |
Local law |
Depends on country |
Important for Norway passengers: Norway is not an EU member, but it is part of the European Economic Area (EEA). EC 261/2004 applies to flights departing from Norwegian airports (Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim, etc.) in the same way it applies to EU departures. Your rights are identical.
How Much Compensation Can You Claim?
Compensation is fixed by regulation and depends on flight distance — not ticket price or cabin class.
€250
Up to 1,500 km
e.g. Amsterdam → London
Amsterdam → Paris
€400
1,500 – 3,500 km
e.g. Amsterdam → Cairo
Amsterdam → Nairobi
€600
Over 3,500 km
e.g. Amsterdam → New York
Amsterdam → Bangkok
For flights over 3,500 km, compensation may be reduced to €300 if the arrival delay is between 3 and 4 hours. The full €600 applies when the delay exceeds 4 hours. Under UK261, the equivalent amounts are £220, £350, and £520.
When Are You Entitled to Compensation?
Flight delays
You are entitled to compensation if your KLM flight arrived at your final destination 3 or more hours late, the delay was caused by factors within KLM's control, and the flight was covered by EC 261. The clock starts when the aircraft doors open at your destination — not at departure. Be aware of rolling delays: KLM may announce a series of short incremental delays rather than one long delay. Your rights are based on the total delay at arrival, regardless of how it was communicated.
Flight cancellations
You are entitled to compensation if KLM cancelled your flight and notified you fewer than 14 days before departure, and no comparable alternative was offered. You always have the right to a full refund or rerouting, regardless of the notice period. If KLM offers you a non-refundable travel voucher instead of cash, the voucher amounts are slightly higher (€350, €500 or €800 depending on distance), but you are under no obligation to accept — cash compensation is your legal right.
Denied boarding
If KLM denied you boarding against your will — due to overbooking or other operational reasons — you are entitled to €250–€600 compensation, plus a full refund or rerouting, plus care at the airport. If you volunteered to give up your seat in exchange for incentives, you are not entitled to statutory EC 261 compensation, but you can still negotiate additional benefits with KLM at the time.
KLM staff strikes
KLM has a history of labour disputes — most recently a ground staff strike in September 2025 that cancelled over 100 flights at Schiphol. According to European Court of Justice rulings, strikes by an airline's own employees — particularly those related to internal wage and contract disputes — are generally not considered extraordinary circumstances. This means KLM must pay compensation when its own staff go on strike.
KLM staff strikes = compensable. If your KLM flight was cancelled or delayed 3+ hours due to a strike by KLM employees (ground staff, cabin crew, pilots), you are likely entitled to €250–€600 per passenger. Air traffic control strikes and third-party airport worker strikes remain extraordinary circumstances and are generally not compensable.
Downgrading
If KLM moved you to a lower cabin class for operational reasons, you are entitled to a partial ticket refund under EC 261:
- Flights up to 1,500 km: 30% of the ticket price
- Flights between 1,500 and 3,500 km: 50% of the ticket price
- Flights over 3,500 km: 75% of the ticket price
Your Right to Care During a Delay
| Delay duration | What KLM must provide |
| 2 hours+ | Free meals and drinks · 2 free phone calls or emails |
| 3–5 hours | Full meal appropriate to the time of day |
| 5 hours+ | All of the above + right to a full ticket refund |
| Overnight delay | Hotel accommodation + airport transfers (both ways) |
These care rights apply even during extraordinary circumstances. Keep all receipts — if KLM failed to provide these, you can claim reimbursement for reasonable expenses.
When Is Compensation Not Available?
KLM does not owe financial compensation when a disruption is caused by genuine extraordinary circumstances beyond its control:
- Severe weather (storms, blizzards, dense fog)
- Air traffic control strikes or airspace restrictions
- Airport security incidents or closures
- Political unrest or natural disasters
- Medical emergencies on board
- Bird strikes or externally caused technical damage
Technical faults and crew shortages are not extraordinary circumstances. If KLM cites a technical issue or operational problem as the cause of your delay, compensation is still due. The burden of proof lies with KLM — not the passenger. Voos will challenge unjustified rejections on your behalf.
How to Claim KLM Compensation
1.
Gather your documents — KLM booking reference, boarding pass or e-ticket, any delay or cancellation notification, and receipts for expenses incurred.
2.
Check eligibility — confirm your departure airport (EU, EEA, or UK counts), that you arrived 3+ hours late at your final destination, and that the disruption was within KLM's control.
3.
Submit a claim to KLM — use KLM's online compensation form at klm.com and reference EC 261/2004. KLM is required to respond within a reasonable time; follow up in writing if you receive no reply after 4–6 weeks.
4.
Escalate if rejected — file a complaint with the relevant national enforcement authority: ILT – Inspectie Leefomgeving en Transport (Netherlands) · CAA (UK) · Luftfahrt-Bundesamt (Germany) · DGAC (France).
5.
Or let Voos handle everything — one submission, and we manage all correspondence, escalations, and legal steps. No win, no fee.
Do not accept Flying Blue miles or vouchers without reading the terms. KLM may offer Flying Blue miles or a non-refundable travel credit in place of cash compensation. Under EC 261/2004, you are entitled to cash. Miles can expire and vouchers may have restrictions — always request a bank transfer.
How Voos Can Help with Your KLM Claim
KLM processes compensation claims through its website, but responses can be slow and rejections are common — particularly for strike-related claims or when KLM invokes extraordinary circumstances. Voos takes the process off your hands entirely.
Free eligibility check
Instant answer — no commitment required.
We handle everything
All correspondence, escalations, and legal steps.
Legal action if required
We escalate to national enforcement bodies or court if needed.
No win, no fee
Our fee is only charged when compensation is successfully recovered.
Check My KLM Claim →
If your KLM flight was delayed or cancelled, Voos can review your claim and, if eligible, pursue it with the airline on your behalf. Our service is risk-free – fees are only charged if your claim is successful. Depending on your specific case, compensation of up to €600 per person may be possible.
- Gather your flight number and booking details
- Keep your boarding pass or e-ticket
- Document communications with the airline
- Check your eligibility for compensation today
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Amsterdam Schiphol is in an EU country (the Netherlands), so EC 261/2004 applies in full. A 4-hour delay at arrival entitles you to compensation of €250–€600 depending on the distance of your flight, provided the delay was caused by factors within KLM's control and not extraordinary circumstances.
Yes. Because KLM is an EU-registered carrier, EC 261/2004 applies to its flights arriving into the EU even from non-EU origins. New York–Amsterdam exceeds 5,500 km, so you may be eligible for up to €600 per passenger, provided the delay was within KLM's control.
Most likely yes. European Court of Justice rulings have established that strikes by an airline's own employees — including ground staff — over internal disputes such as wages and contracts are generally not considered extraordinary circumstances. KLM ground staff strikes (such as the September 2025 walkout at Schiphol) fall into this category, meaning compensation is due. Air traffic control strikes by third parties remain extraordinary circumstances and are not compensable.
With 10 days' notice (less than 14 days), you are entitled to a full refund or rerouting, plus financial compensation of €250–€600, unless KLM offered a closely-timed alternative flight. For cancellations between 7 and 14 days before departure, KLM can avoid compensation only if the replacement departs no more than 2 hours earlier and arrives no more than 4 hours later than the original. The closer to departure, the stricter this criteria becomes.
No. Under EC 261/2004, you are entitled to cash compensation payable by bank transfer. KLM may offer a non-refundable travel voucher for a slightly higher amount, but this is entirely optional — you are not required to accept it. Always insist on a cash payment if that is your preference.
In the Netherlands (KLM's home country), the limitation period is 2 years from the date of the flight. In the UK, you have up to 6 years. In Germany it is 3 years, and in France 5 years. The applicable period is generally determined by the country where your flight departed. We recommend claiming as soon as possible while evidence is fresh.
Yes. EC 261/2004 compensation rights apply regardless of how you paid for your ticket — cash, miles, credit card points, or through a third-party agent. The compensation is for the disruption to your journey, not a refund of the ticket price. Always direct your claim to KLM directly, not to the travel agent or booking platform.
Yes, if all flights are on the same booking (same PNR/reservation number) and the first leg departed from an EU or EEA airport. If the delay on the first leg caused you to miss your connection and you arrived at your final destination 3 or more hours late, you are entitled to compensation. If flights are on separate bookings, this protection does not apply.