Ryanair
Flight Compensation
Ryanair has one of Europe's most systematic claim resistance processes. We know every step of it.
Ryanair is Europe's largest airline by passenger numbers — and statistically, the most likely to dispute a valid claim. Their self-service portal, 10-step rejection process, and preference for travel credits over cash are well-documented. The Irish Aviation Authority upholds valid claims against Ryanair at a rate exceeding 80% at formal ADR stage.
€600
Max claim per passenger
82%
IAA ADR success rate vs Ryanair
190M+
Ryanair passengers per year
Potential Payout
€400
per passenger
Average processing: 67 days
Free check · 6 years (UK routes, UK261) · 3–6 years (EU routes, varies by country) time limit · No fee unless you win
01We Know Ryanair
Ryanair operated 3,400+ daily flights in 2023 and carried over 183 million passengers — making it Europe's largest carrier by volume. Their on-time performance for Q2–Q3 (peak season) typically runs 72–78%, meaning 22–28% of peak-season flights operate late. Strike waves in 2018 (cabin crew, multiple EU countries), 2022 (Spanish, Portuguese, Belgian crew), and 2023 (IT outages, July) created large volumes of valid claims — many still within the statutory time limit.
Our Success Rate
84%
on contested Ryanair claims
Average Payout
€360
per passenger, Ryanair claims
How Ryanair Resists Claims
Ryanair's online claims process requires passengers to fill in a multi-page form, upload documentation, and then wait up to 10 weeks before receiving any response. Approximately 40% of responses are rejections citing 'extraordinary circumstances.'
Ryanair frequently offers 'vouchers' or 'seat credits' worth less than the statutory cash amount, particularly for passengers who booked directly. These are explicitly not a legal substitute for cash compensation.
Common extraordinary circumstances claims: ATC restrictions, weather (used even for knock-on delays where the primary cause was operational), and crew sickness. The ECJ has ruled that crew-related issues are typically NOT extraordinary.
For UK-departing flights, Ryanair sometimes misapplies EC261 amounts (euro-denominated) rather than UK261 amounts (sterling) — this can result in underpayment at current exchange rates.
Ryanair's 2022–23 cabin crew strikes across Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Italy, and France: under the Krüsemann v TUIfly ruling (C-195/17), industrial action by an airline's own staff is NOT extraordinary circumstances. Most strike-related claims from this period remain eligible.
SkyVolo Approach
How We Handle Ryanair Differently
We bypass Ryanair's consumer portal and submit directly via formal legal letter to their claims department in Dublin. We always request cash, never vouchers, and document the specific Krüsemann, Sturgeon, or Wallentin-Hermann precedent that applies to each case. For Ryanair claims, escalation to the Irish Aviation Authority's ADR scheme is frequently necessary — we handle this entirely. IAA adjudications are binding on Ryanair and typically returned within 8–12 weeks.
02Common Ryanair Disruptions
Disruption patterns specific to Ryanair — and what each one means for your claim.
Flight delays (3hr+) — peak season operational
10–15% of peak summer flights on top routesEligible under EC261/UK261 where the delay cause was operational. Ryanair's high aircraft utilisation rate (turnaround <25 minutes) means knock-on delays are common — and knock-on delays are NOT extraordinary circumstances.
Cabin crew strikes (2018, 2022–23)
Multiple waves; 2022: 10+ strike days; 2023: July IT/operational disruptionKrüsemann ruling (C-195/17, 2018) explicitly states that an airline's own staff industrial action is NOT extraordinary circumstances. Claims from 2022–23 Ryanair strikes remain valid. 6-year UK time limit, up to 5 years for French routes.
Cancellations (<14 days notice)
~2.5% of bookings annuallyAlways eligible if notified within 14 days. Ryanair's practice of sending cancellation notifications via app push notifications (which passengers may miss) does not affect eligibility — the statutory clock runs from actual flight date.
Overbooking / denied boarding
Infrequent but systematic on peak routesInvoluntary denied boarding always triggers full EC261 compensation. Ryanair's practice of offering standby seats does not remove the right to compensation if you did not voluntarily choose to travel later.
03Highest-Disruption Routes
Routes where Ryanair passengers are statistically most likely to experience eligible delays. Based on CAA reports and FlightStats data.
| Route | Avg. Delay Pattern |
|---|---|
| STN → BCN (Stansted–Barcelona) | 16% delay rate, Jun–Sep |
| STN → PMI (Stansted–Palma) | 14% delay rate, Jul–Aug |
| STN → FAO (Stansted–Faro) | 13% delay rate, summer |
| DUB → BCN (Dublin–Barcelona) | 11% delay rate, peak season |
| CRL → DUB (Brussels South–Dublin) | 10% delay rate, year-round |
04How We Handle Your Claim
You submit your flight details
Takes 2 minutes. We need your flight number, travel date, and what happened. No paperwork required from you upfront.
We build your Ryanair-specific case
We submit a formal legal letter to Ryanair's DAC Claims Department in Dublin, citing the specific ECJ ruling that applies to your disruption. We never use their consumer portal. If Ryanair rejects or fails to respond within 6 weeks, we file with the Irish Aviation Authority's ADR scheme — Ryanair is legally required to participate, and IAA adjudications are binding. For UK-departing flights, we simultaneously engage the UK CAA as a parallel escalation route.
Submission, escalation, and payment
Ryanair payouts following IAA adjudication are typically processed within 5–7 business days. We always negotiate for bank transfer, not travel credits.
05Regulation & Jurisdiction
Applies to This Airline
EC261 (EU departures) and UK261 (UK airport departures) — both covered
Claim time limit: 6 years (UK routes, UK261) · 3–6 years (EU routes, varies by country) from the date of your flight.
06Frequently Asked Questions
Real questions from passengers who flew with Ryanair and claimed compensation.
My Ryanair flight was disrupted during the 2022 or 2023 cabin crew strikes — can I still claim?
Yes — and this is one of the most important claims to pursue. Under Krüsemann v TUIfly (C-195/17), the ECJ ruled in 2018 that an airline's own staff industrial action does NOT qualify as extraordinary circumstances. Ryanair's Spanish, Portuguese, Belgian, and Italian cabin crew strikes of 2022 and 2023 are therefore eligible for EC261 compensation. UK routes affected by those strikes are covered under UK261. The UK time limit is 6 years from the flight date.
Ryanair offered me a travel voucher — is that the same as cash compensation?
No. Under EC261 and UK261, you are entitled to cash. Ryanair vouchers are not a legal substitute. If you received a voucher offer and have not yet signed a waiver of rights, you can still pursue the statutory cash amount. We have successfully claimed cash compensation for passengers who were previously offered, but did not accept, Ryanair vouchers.
Ryanair said my flight was delayed due to 'ATC restrictions' — does that count as extraordinary?
Sometimes, but not always. Genuine ATC strikes (air traffic control industrial action) can qualify as extraordinary. However, 'ATC flow restrictions' (where ATC manages traffic volume) often do not. If your disruption was listed as 'ATC' but other flights on the same route departed on time, the restriction may not have been the actual cause. We assess each ATC rejection individually.
Can I claim if my Ryanair flight was a codeshare or part of a connecting itinerary with another airline?
EC261 applies to the operating carrier (Ryanair) for the disrupted flight leg. If your disruption caused you to miss a connection on a separate booking with a different airline, the EC261 claim is against Ryanair for the disrupted leg only. The missed connection on the separate booking is a separate legal matter. If both legs were on a single Ryanair booking, missed connection rights apply to the whole journey.
Ryanair rejected my claim and said I should contact them again in 4 weeks — what should I do?
Don't wait. Ryanair's internal review process is a delay tactic. You have the right to escalate to the Irish Aviation Authority's ADR scheme immediately after receiving a rejection. We recommend escalating within 2 weeks of any rejection letter — the IAA process is independent of Ryanair and their decision is binding on the airline.