Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Inside Schiphol Airport Lounge 1 on 18 Dec 2020
Inside Schiphol Airport Lounge 1 on 18 Dec 2020 - Credit: NL Times / NL Times
Business
Coronavirus
canceled flight
refund
Remco Kuilman
Aviclaim
Tom van Bokhoven
Vlucht-vertraagt.nl
Paul Vaneker
EUclaim
KLM
Transavia
Ryanair
Iberia
Royal Air Maroc
D-Reizen
Wednesday, 30 March 2022 - 09:03

Share this article:

Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window

Thousands still waiting for refunds for Covid canceled flights

About 5,000 travelers are still waiting for a refund for flights that were canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. Especially foreign airlines and platforms that sell airline tickets are slow to pay back travelers' money, BNR reported after speaking with three large claim organizations. Travelers who want to take legal action should hurry - these types of claims are only possible within two years of the flight cancelation. The first claims expire this month.

"They cannot get that money back," Remco Kuilman of Aviclaim said to the broadcaster. "Airlines are often unreachable, or they hide behind voucher schemes." Foreign companies, in particular, are slow to pay, he said. "The highest amount is open with Ryanair." Passengers of Iberia and Royal Air Maroc also struggle to get a refund.

The same applies to people who bought plane tickets via online platforms like Cheaptickets.nl. "It is often unclear whether the intermediary or the airline has to pay. The money floats somewhere between the two," said Tom van Bokhoven of Vlucht-vertraagt.nl. For example, an airline pays the intermediary, who doesn't refund the passenger.

Dutch companies seem to be meeting their payment obligations, though their money also sometimes ends up with an intermediary instead of the traveler. Last month, consumers' association Consumentenbond called on Minister Mark Harbers of Infrastructure to force KLM and Transavia to repay passengers who booked through bankrupt intermediary D-Reizen.

"The companies have already paid the refund of ticket costs to D-Reizen, but D-Reizen has not passed the refunds on to customers. The funds have therefore disappeared in the bankruptcy," Paul Vaneker of EUclaim said to BNR.

More like this

Image
Travelers at Schiphol Airport. Hundreds of flights at the airport were once again canceled due to snowfall.
Plane ticket prices skyrocket over snow chaos at Schiphol Airport
Image
A snowy Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner operated by KLM before departing Schiphol Airport for Dubai. 7 Jan. 2026
KLM flooded with complaints about poor customer service
Image
Corendon
Seven in ten Dutch travel companies are vague about holiday cancellation fees
Image
Planes at Schiphol Airport
Sharp decrease in canceled, delayed flights this year; Damage claims down by nearly half
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Knife found by journalist was murder weapon in ABN Amro worker’s stabbing, OM confirms
  • Researchers warn swimmers underestimate hidden dangers of open water amid Summer heat
  • Tata Steel faces possible 600 million euro fine in criminal pollution case
  • Netherlands set for week of heat and sunshine before storms bring cooler weather
  • Man severely beaten after Amersfoort Pride; Police probe anti-LGBTQ+ motive

Top stories

  • Man severely beaten after Amersfoort Pride; Police probe anti-LGBTQ+ motive
  • Video: Fights break out outside Ter Apel center on first night after aid groups pull out
  • Video: Two injured in Wassenaar shooting; Suspect arrested
  • Netherlands braces for incoming heat wave as temperatures to reach 34°C
  • Dutch workplaces not ready for rising heat, labor union warns

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content