If we miss a connection in Toronto what should we expect the airline to do?
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We're travelling from the UK to Jamaica via Toronto with Air Canada transatlantic and Air Canada Rouge for the trip to the Caribbean.
We have a somewhat tight 60-minute transfer on the way there (Air Canada says this is okay). I'm half expecting either us or our luggage will miss this transfer and we will pack accordingly.
My question is that given we booked all of this as a single trip with Air Canada, assuming we miss the flight, what sort of compensation, help with hotels, alternative flights can we expect from Air Canada? Also what are the minimum legal requirements in Canadian law (vouchers vs cash etc).
transit toronto air-canada
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up vote
6
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We're travelling from the UK to Jamaica via Toronto with Air Canada transatlantic and Air Canada Rouge for the trip to the Caribbean.
We have a somewhat tight 60-minute transfer on the way there (Air Canada says this is okay). I'm half expecting either us or our luggage will miss this transfer and we will pack accordingly.
My question is that given we booked all of this as a single trip with Air Canada, assuming we miss the flight, what sort of compensation, help with hotels, alternative flights can we expect from Air Canada? Also what are the minimum legal requirements in Canadian law (vouchers vs cash etc).
transit toronto air-canada
add a comment |Â
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
We're travelling from the UK to Jamaica via Toronto with Air Canada transatlantic and Air Canada Rouge for the trip to the Caribbean.
We have a somewhat tight 60-minute transfer on the way there (Air Canada says this is okay). I'm half expecting either us or our luggage will miss this transfer and we will pack accordingly.
My question is that given we booked all of this as a single trip with Air Canada, assuming we miss the flight, what sort of compensation, help with hotels, alternative flights can we expect from Air Canada? Also what are the minimum legal requirements in Canadian law (vouchers vs cash etc).
transit toronto air-canada
We're travelling from the UK to Jamaica via Toronto with Air Canada transatlantic and Air Canada Rouge for the trip to the Caribbean.
We have a somewhat tight 60-minute transfer on the way there (Air Canada says this is okay). I'm half expecting either us or our luggage will miss this transfer and we will pack accordingly.
My question is that given we booked all of this as a single trip with Air Canada, assuming we miss the flight, what sort of compensation, help with hotels, alternative flights can we expect from Air Canada? Also what are the minimum legal requirements in Canadian law (vouchers vs cash etc).
transit toronto air-canada
edited Jun 30 at 2:54
dda
13.9k32548
13.9k32548
asked Jun 29 at 17:11
PeterI
1335
1335
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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up vote
7
down vote
accepted
As you are departing from the UK, which is still in the EU for now, you benefit from Flight Compensation Regulation 261/2004, commonly known as EU261, which requires the airline to provide assistance in case of delay, and possibly compensation if you arrive (very) late at your final destination (unless it's not their fault).
What exactly you are entitled to depends on the exact circumstances (how late you are, how long you have to stay), but you can expect that:
- they will rebook you on the next available flight
- in case you have to stay overnight in Toronto they will arrange an hotel for you, provide vouchers for meals and refreshments, etc.
If you get at your final destination over 4 hours late, you will also be entitled to a 600 euro compensation, unless it's not their fault (ATC strike for instance).
Note that EU261 will not apply for the return flight as it's neither an EU airline nor a flight departing from the EU, however many of things (hotels and meal vouchers) still hold via other regulations (but usually definitely not the compensation).
Anyone have any idea about the other way or Canadian equivalents?
â PeterI
Jun 29 at 23:20
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up vote
5
down vote
I can tell you what happens when no EU flight segment is involved, as this should be the worst case.
Air Canada once sold me a Zihuatanejo->Mexico City->Toronto flight with a mid-afternoon 45 minute layover in Mexico City, including a terminal change, that I knew was blatantly impossible to make. As all other possible routes involved either a red-eye flight (which I dislike) or an overnight layover somewhere at my expense I bought the ticket they offered anyway. When I missed the connection Air Canada rebooked me into business class on the next flight out and, since that was the next morning, gave me hotel and meal vouchers for the airport Marriott. I have also gotten hotel and meal vouchers from Air Canada when my flight was cancelled (at SFO) due to equipment issues and they couldn't get a replacement plane there until the next morning.
While I think I've had more issues with Air Canada than other airlines I've flown frequently, if you are flying on an Air Canada ticket they are fairly reliably forthcoming with help to fix, at their expense, the things they have screwed up. I've never been offered cash but they are generous with vouchers and make hotel reservations when you need that. That said, if your inbound flight arrives on time I also think a one hour international-to-international connection in Toronto terminal 1 is quite doable. Your luggage should be forwarded directly to the outbound flight and there is a separate, generally queueless, immigration channel for connections that should keep you airside.
Thanks for that, nice to have information. I've voted the other question as correct as technically it hits my exact situation. On the way back we have a longer stopover so it seems less likely to cause problems.
â PeterI
Jul 1 at 16:32
add a comment |Â
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
As you are departing from the UK, which is still in the EU for now, you benefit from Flight Compensation Regulation 261/2004, commonly known as EU261, which requires the airline to provide assistance in case of delay, and possibly compensation if you arrive (very) late at your final destination (unless it's not their fault).
What exactly you are entitled to depends on the exact circumstances (how late you are, how long you have to stay), but you can expect that:
- they will rebook you on the next available flight
- in case you have to stay overnight in Toronto they will arrange an hotel for you, provide vouchers for meals and refreshments, etc.
If you get at your final destination over 4 hours late, you will also be entitled to a 600 euro compensation, unless it's not their fault (ATC strike for instance).
Note that EU261 will not apply for the return flight as it's neither an EU airline nor a flight departing from the EU, however many of things (hotels and meal vouchers) still hold via other regulations (but usually definitely not the compensation).
Anyone have any idea about the other way or Canadian equivalents?
â PeterI
Jun 29 at 23:20
add a comment |Â
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
As you are departing from the UK, which is still in the EU for now, you benefit from Flight Compensation Regulation 261/2004, commonly known as EU261, which requires the airline to provide assistance in case of delay, and possibly compensation if you arrive (very) late at your final destination (unless it's not their fault).
What exactly you are entitled to depends on the exact circumstances (how late you are, how long you have to stay), but you can expect that:
- they will rebook you on the next available flight
- in case you have to stay overnight in Toronto they will arrange an hotel for you, provide vouchers for meals and refreshments, etc.
If you get at your final destination over 4 hours late, you will also be entitled to a 600 euro compensation, unless it's not their fault (ATC strike for instance).
Note that EU261 will not apply for the return flight as it's neither an EU airline nor a flight departing from the EU, however many of things (hotels and meal vouchers) still hold via other regulations (but usually definitely not the compensation).
Anyone have any idea about the other way or Canadian equivalents?
â PeterI
Jun 29 at 23:20
add a comment |Â
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
As you are departing from the UK, which is still in the EU for now, you benefit from Flight Compensation Regulation 261/2004, commonly known as EU261, which requires the airline to provide assistance in case of delay, and possibly compensation if you arrive (very) late at your final destination (unless it's not their fault).
What exactly you are entitled to depends on the exact circumstances (how late you are, how long you have to stay), but you can expect that:
- they will rebook you on the next available flight
- in case you have to stay overnight in Toronto they will arrange an hotel for you, provide vouchers for meals and refreshments, etc.
If you get at your final destination over 4 hours late, you will also be entitled to a 600 euro compensation, unless it's not their fault (ATC strike for instance).
Note that EU261 will not apply for the return flight as it's neither an EU airline nor a flight departing from the EU, however many of things (hotels and meal vouchers) still hold via other regulations (but usually definitely not the compensation).
As you are departing from the UK, which is still in the EU for now, you benefit from Flight Compensation Regulation 261/2004, commonly known as EU261, which requires the airline to provide assistance in case of delay, and possibly compensation if you arrive (very) late at your final destination (unless it's not their fault).
What exactly you are entitled to depends on the exact circumstances (how late you are, how long you have to stay), but you can expect that:
- they will rebook you on the next available flight
- in case you have to stay overnight in Toronto they will arrange an hotel for you, provide vouchers for meals and refreshments, etc.
If you get at your final destination over 4 hours late, you will also be entitled to a 600 euro compensation, unless it's not their fault (ATC strike for instance).
Note that EU261 will not apply for the return flight as it's neither an EU airline nor a flight departing from the EU, however many of things (hotels and meal vouchers) still hold via other regulations (but usually definitely not the compensation).
answered Jun 29 at 17:23
jcaron
8,4721735
8,4721735
Anyone have any idea about the other way or Canadian equivalents?
â PeterI
Jun 29 at 23:20
add a comment |Â
Anyone have any idea about the other way or Canadian equivalents?
â PeterI
Jun 29 at 23:20
Anyone have any idea about the other way or Canadian equivalents?
â PeterI
Jun 29 at 23:20
Anyone have any idea about the other way or Canadian equivalents?
â PeterI
Jun 29 at 23:20
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
I can tell you what happens when no EU flight segment is involved, as this should be the worst case.
Air Canada once sold me a Zihuatanejo->Mexico City->Toronto flight with a mid-afternoon 45 minute layover in Mexico City, including a terminal change, that I knew was blatantly impossible to make. As all other possible routes involved either a red-eye flight (which I dislike) or an overnight layover somewhere at my expense I bought the ticket they offered anyway. When I missed the connection Air Canada rebooked me into business class on the next flight out and, since that was the next morning, gave me hotel and meal vouchers for the airport Marriott. I have also gotten hotel and meal vouchers from Air Canada when my flight was cancelled (at SFO) due to equipment issues and they couldn't get a replacement plane there until the next morning.
While I think I've had more issues with Air Canada than other airlines I've flown frequently, if you are flying on an Air Canada ticket they are fairly reliably forthcoming with help to fix, at their expense, the things they have screwed up. I've never been offered cash but they are generous with vouchers and make hotel reservations when you need that. That said, if your inbound flight arrives on time I also think a one hour international-to-international connection in Toronto terminal 1 is quite doable. Your luggage should be forwarded directly to the outbound flight and there is a separate, generally queueless, immigration channel for connections that should keep you airside.
Thanks for that, nice to have information. I've voted the other question as correct as technically it hits my exact situation. On the way back we have a longer stopover so it seems less likely to cause problems.
â PeterI
Jul 1 at 16:32
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
I can tell you what happens when no EU flight segment is involved, as this should be the worst case.
Air Canada once sold me a Zihuatanejo->Mexico City->Toronto flight with a mid-afternoon 45 minute layover in Mexico City, including a terminal change, that I knew was blatantly impossible to make. As all other possible routes involved either a red-eye flight (which I dislike) or an overnight layover somewhere at my expense I bought the ticket they offered anyway. When I missed the connection Air Canada rebooked me into business class on the next flight out and, since that was the next morning, gave me hotel and meal vouchers for the airport Marriott. I have also gotten hotel and meal vouchers from Air Canada when my flight was cancelled (at SFO) due to equipment issues and they couldn't get a replacement plane there until the next morning.
While I think I've had more issues with Air Canada than other airlines I've flown frequently, if you are flying on an Air Canada ticket they are fairly reliably forthcoming with help to fix, at their expense, the things they have screwed up. I've never been offered cash but they are generous with vouchers and make hotel reservations when you need that. That said, if your inbound flight arrives on time I also think a one hour international-to-international connection in Toronto terminal 1 is quite doable. Your luggage should be forwarded directly to the outbound flight and there is a separate, generally queueless, immigration channel for connections that should keep you airside.
Thanks for that, nice to have information. I've voted the other question as correct as technically it hits my exact situation. On the way back we have a longer stopover so it seems less likely to cause problems.
â PeterI
Jul 1 at 16:32
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
I can tell you what happens when no EU flight segment is involved, as this should be the worst case.
Air Canada once sold me a Zihuatanejo->Mexico City->Toronto flight with a mid-afternoon 45 minute layover in Mexico City, including a terminal change, that I knew was blatantly impossible to make. As all other possible routes involved either a red-eye flight (which I dislike) or an overnight layover somewhere at my expense I bought the ticket they offered anyway. When I missed the connection Air Canada rebooked me into business class on the next flight out and, since that was the next morning, gave me hotel and meal vouchers for the airport Marriott. I have also gotten hotel and meal vouchers from Air Canada when my flight was cancelled (at SFO) due to equipment issues and they couldn't get a replacement plane there until the next morning.
While I think I've had more issues with Air Canada than other airlines I've flown frequently, if you are flying on an Air Canada ticket they are fairly reliably forthcoming with help to fix, at their expense, the things they have screwed up. I've never been offered cash but they are generous with vouchers and make hotel reservations when you need that. That said, if your inbound flight arrives on time I also think a one hour international-to-international connection in Toronto terminal 1 is quite doable. Your luggage should be forwarded directly to the outbound flight and there is a separate, generally queueless, immigration channel for connections that should keep you airside.
I can tell you what happens when no EU flight segment is involved, as this should be the worst case.
Air Canada once sold me a Zihuatanejo->Mexico City->Toronto flight with a mid-afternoon 45 minute layover in Mexico City, including a terminal change, that I knew was blatantly impossible to make. As all other possible routes involved either a red-eye flight (which I dislike) or an overnight layover somewhere at my expense I bought the ticket they offered anyway. When I missed the connection Air Canada rebooked me into business class on the next flight out and, since that was the next morning, gave me hotel and meal vouchers for the airport Marriott. I have also gotten hotel and meal vouchers from Air Canada when my flight was cancelled (at SFO) due to equipment issues and they couldn't get a replacement plane there until the next morning.
While I think I've had more issues with Air Canada than other airlines I've flown frequently, if you are flying on an Air Canada ticket they are fairly reliably forthcoming with help to fix, at their expense, the things they have screwed up. I've never been offered cash but they are generous with vouchers and make hotel reservations when you need that. That said, if your inbound flight arrives on time I also think a one hour international-to-international connection in Toronto terminal 1 is quite doable. Your luggage should be forwarded directly to the outbound flight and there is a separate, generally queueless, immigration channel for connections that should keep you airside.
answered Jun 30 at 1:37
Dennis
2,719613
2,719613
Thanks for that, nice to have information. I've voted the other question as correct as technically it hits my exact situation. On the way back we have a longer stopover so it seems less likely to cause problems.
â PeterI
Jul 1 at 16:32
add a comment |Â
Thanks for that, nice to have information. I've voted the other question as correct as technically it hits my exact situation. On the way back we have a longer stopover so it seems less likely to cause problems.
â PeterI
Jul 1 at 16:32
Thanks for that, nice to have information. I've voted the other question as correct as technically it hits my exact situation. On the way back we have a longer stopover so it seems less likely to cause problems.
â PeterI
Jul 1 at 16:32
Thanks for that, nice to have information. I've voted the other question as correct as technically it hits my exact situation. On the way back we have a longer stopover so it seems less likely to cause problems.
â PeterI
Jul 1 at 16:32
add a comment |Â
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