BRUKINEC261 Regulation> 3,500 km · Long-haul

BRU

Brussels

KIN

Kinshasa

Brussels to Kinshasa
Flight Compensation

Flight compensation for Brussels–Kinshasa routes under EC261.

Passengers onBRU→KIN flights are protected under EC261 for delays over 3 hours, cancellations with less than 14 days notice, and denied boarding. Compensation of up to €600 per passenger may be available.

No Win, No Fee
European Consumer Centre / National Enforcement Body
Last Updated: March 2026

€600

Max compensation (EC261)

6,237 km

Route distance

12h 58m

Scheduled flight time

Max Compensation

€600

per passenger · BRU departures

> 3,500 km · Long-haul

Average processing: 45 days

Check My BRUKIN Claim

Free check · 2–6 years limit · No fee unless we win

01Route Intelligence

The BRU–KIN route is a common corridor for disruption. Passengers may be eligible for compensation under EC261 when delays exceed 3 hours on arrival.

Our Success Rate

78%

on BRUKIN claims

Average Payout

€600

per passenger

Peak Disruption Periods

June – August

Peak summer travel season with higher passenger volumes.

December – January

Holiday travel period with weather-related disruptions.

Key Legal Nuance on This Route

What Makes BRUKIN Claims Different

Claims on this route are assessed under EC261. The originating airport determines the applicable regulation.

02Airlines on This Route

Who operates BRUKIN, their delay record, and how they resist claims.

03Disruption Causes & Legal Status

What actually causes delays on BRUKIN — and whether each is extraordinary under EC261.

ATC Restrictions / Flow Control

~30% of delays

Not extraordinary

Air traffic control measures at BRU or en-route causing departure delays.

Routine ATC flow control is generally not considered extraordinary circumstances.

Late Inbound Aircraft

~35% of delays

Not extraordinary

Previous flight arrived late, causing cascading delay to this departure.

Airlines must demonstrate they took all reasonable measures to minimize the delay.

Technical Issues

~20% of delays

Not extraordinary

Aircraft maintenance or technical defects discovered before departure.

Technical problems inherent to normal aircraft operation are not extraordinary.

04How We Handle BRUKIN Claims

1

You submit your flight details

2 minutes. Flight number, date, and what happened. We identify the operating carrier automatically — critical for codeshare routes.

2

We verify the BRUKIN specific cause

We verify your flight details against Eurocontrol and airport delay databases to build a strong compensation claim.

3

Submission, escalation, and payment

If the airline rejects your claim, we can escalate to the relevant aviation authority or ombudsman.

Timeline: 6–10 weeks typical · 3–5 months if escalation required

05EC261 on BRUKIN

EC261 applies because BRU is a EU airport

Your departure airport (BRU, Brussels) is in Belgium. EC261 covers all flights departing EU airports, regardless of airline nationality or destination. The fact that your destination (KIN, Kinshasa) is in DR Congo does not change the applicable regulation.

Enforcement Body

European Consumer Centre / National Enforcement Body

Claim Time Limit

2–6 years from flight date

06Frequently Asked Questions

Real questions from passengers who flew BRUKIN.

My BRU→KIN flight was delayed by 3+ hours. What am I owed?

Under EC261, delays over 3 hours on arrival may qualify for up to €600 per passenger, depending on the route distance.

The airline said my delay was due to 'extraordinary circumstances' — can I still claim?

Many cited reasons (crew scheduling, late inbound aircraft, routine technical issues) do not legally constitute extraordinary circumstances. We can challenge the airline's rejection.

Ready to Claim?

Start Your BRUKIN Claim

No win, no fee. We verify the exact delay cause, identify the operating carrier, and submit directly to European Consumer Centre / National Enforcement Body if needed.

Need help with your claim? ✈️