Delay at Amsterdam Schiphol: your rights

A practical guide for passengers at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol — from collecting evidence to filing your EU261 claim.

If your flight from Amsterdam Schiphol Airport (IATA: AMS) arrives at its destination 3 or more hours late, you are entitled to EU261 compensation of €250 to €600, depending on the flight distance. Schiphol is one of Europe's busiest airports and delays occur regularly. This page explains exactly what you can do — at the airport and afterwards. DelayPaid handles EU261 claims exclusively for flights departing from or arriving at Dutch airports including Schiphol.

What to do at Schiphol during the delay

The more evidence you collect on the spot, the stronger your later claim:

  • Go to the gate or your airline's desk and ask for written confirmation of the delay and the reason given. Not every airline provides this voluntarily, but asking already creates a paper trail.
  • Photograph the departures board (FIDS screen) showing the delay, the time, and your flight number.
  • Keep your boarding pass — digital or paper. This is your proof that you were actually on board.
  • Note the actual departure time (doors closed) and later the actual arrival time (doors open at destination).
  • Keep receipts for food, drinks, or other costs you incurred because of the delay. You can reclaim these separately from the EU261 compensation.

Schiphol as the departure point: advantages for your claim

Departing from Schiphol has several practical advantages for EU261 claimants:

  • Dutch court jurisdiction: You can pursue your case in the Netherlands, even if your airline is foreign-registered. The Cantonal Court is accessible in Amsterdam or in your place of residence.
  • ILT as enforcement body: The Inspectie Leefomgeving en Transport (ilent.nl) is the Dutch national regulator. You can file a free complaint here if the airline does not cooperate.
  • Dutch limitation period (2 years): Article 8:1835 of the Dutch Civil Code gives you 2 years to file a claim. Some other EU countries have shorter periods (Belgium: 1 year).

Popular Schiphol routes and compensation amounts

Schiphol is a major hub. These are frequently flown routes with the applicable EU261 compensation:

DestinationDistanceCompensation (≥3 hrs)
London (Heathrow / Gatwick / Stansted)350–500 km€250
Paris (CDG)approx. 430 km€250
Berlinapprox. 575 km€250
Barcelonaapprox. 1,635 km€400
Rome (Fiumicino)approx. 1,580 km€400
Istanbulapprox. 2,215 km€400
Dubaiapprox. 5,480 km€600 (≥4 hrs)
New York (JFK)approx. 5,850 km€600 (≥4 hrs)
Bangkok (Suvarnabhumi)approx. 9,010 km€600 (≥4 hrs)

Is Schiphol itself responsible?

EU261 always targets the operating airline. Schiphol Airport is not a party to EU261 claims. But this does not mean airport-side problems can never lead to compensation. If a delay was partly caused by airport issues (long security queues, gate problems, baggage handling), the airline is still responsible for a timely departure. Only acute, unforeseeable incidents at the airport may qualify as extraordinary circumstances.

Schiphol and the ILT

The Inspectie Leefomgeving en Transport (ILT) is the Dutch regulator for EU261. If an airline fails to comply with its obligations, you can file a formal complaint via ilent.nl. The ILT has the power to impose fines on airlines that systematically break the law. This is a free route available to you after a rejection.

The ILT does not handle individual compensation claims — it enforces against non-compliant airlines. For your individual compensation you need either the courts or a claims agency.

Honest about your options

  • You can file your EU261 claim free of charge directly with the airline — no agency required.
  • If refused, you can file a free complaint with the ILT (ilent.nl).
  • DelayPaid handles everything for you — no win no fee, 25% success fee incl. VAT, only on success.

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