ℹ
Disclaimer: DelayPaid is not affiliated with KLM Royal Dutch Airlines. This page provides independent consumer information based on EU Regulation 261/2004.
For a KLM flight with an arrival delay of 3 hours or more, EU Regulation 261/2004 entitles you to financial compensation of €250 to €600 per person, depending on the flight distance. This applies to flights departing from an EU airport, and to flights arriving at an EU airport with a European carrier. You can apply for this yourself for free at KLM, or have a specialist agency handle it for you. DelayPaid works on flights to or from Dutch airports.
Compensation amounts for KLM delays
| Flight distance | Min. delay (arrival) | Compensation |
| Up to 1,500 km | ≥ 3 hours | €250 |
| 1,500 – 3,500 km | ≥ 3 hours | €400 |
| > 3,500 km (intercontinental) | 3 – 4 hours | €300 |
| > 3,500 km (intercontinental) | ≥ 4 hours | €600 |
The delay is measured at arrival at your destination — when the aircraft doors open, not when the wheels touch down.
Popular KLM routes and compensation amounts
KLM operates almost all its flights via Amsterdam Schiphol. Examples of common routes and their compensation:
- Amsterdam – London (Heathrow) — approx. 370 km — €250
- Amsterdam – Paris (CDG) — approx. 430 km — €250
- Amsterdam – Barcelona — approx. 1,635 km — €400
- Amsterdam – Madrid — approx. 1,770 km — €400
- Amsterdam – Istanbul — approx. 2,215 km — €400
- Amsterdam – Dubai — approx. 5,480 km — €600 (delay ≥4h)
- Amsterdam – New York (JFK) — approx. 5,850 km — €600 (delay ≥4h)
- Amsterdam – Singapore — approx. 10,840 km — €600 (delay ≥4h)
How KLM handles EU261 claims
KLM has its own online claim form at klm.com. Response times are typically 4–8 weeks. KLM has a professional legal team that reviews and sometimes contests claims.
A common defence from KLM is that the delay was caused by an extraordinary circumstance — such as severe weather, air traffic control disruption, or sometimes a technical defect. Under established EU case law (CJEU in Wallentin-Hermann C-549/07 and Van der Lans C-257/14), a technical defect that is part of normal airline operations is not an extraordinary circumstance and cannot be used to deny compensation.
Step by step: filing a claim with KLM
- Keep your boarding pass and booking confirmation. These are your basic proof of travel.
- Record the arrival time. Check FlightAware or Flightradar24 for the actual arrival time (doors closed = reference time).
- Submit the claim via klm.com. Go to the complaints form and select "EU261 compensation". You can do this yourself, for free.
- Keep all correspondence. Save emails, reference numbers, and confirmations.
- Wait for a response (up to 8 weeks). KLM is required to respond within a reasonable time.
What to do if KLM refuses
- Inspectie Leefomgeving en Transport (ILT): The Dutch EU261 enforcement authority. You can file a free complaint. The ILT can put pressure on KLM.
- Court: The Dutch Cantonal Court handles EU261 claims for flights to and from Dutch airports. No minimum threshold up to €25,000.
- Claims agency: A specialist agency like DelayPaid handles the claim on a no-win-no-fee basis — you pay 25% incl. VAT only if successful.
The limitation period in the Netherlands is 2 years from the flight date (art. 8:1835 BW). Do not wait.
Your options — honestly stated
- You can file an EU261 claim for free directly via klm.com — you do not need an agency for this.
- If KLM refuses, you can file a free complaint with the ILT (ilent.nl).
- DelayPaid handles the whole procedure — including appeals and legal action — for a 25% incl. VAT success fee, only if you win.
Check whether your KLM flight qualifies
Enter your flight details — within 30 seconds you'll know whether your claim looks strong.
Check my flight