The Mercury News

WOW — a 14-hour flight delay

- Christophe­r Elliott Columnist Christophe­r Elliott is ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine and author of “How to Be the World’s Smartest Traveler.” Read travel tips on his blog, elliott.org, or email him at chris@elliott.org.

DEAR TRAVEL TROUBLESHO­OTER

>> I recently flew from Los Angeles to Reykjavik, Iceland, on WOW Air, a discount airline. WOW told me to arrive at 4:30 p.m., but the flight was delayed more than 14 hours. The reason: The aircraft we were using had left Iceland late. WOW knew this, but still told me to get to the airport at 4:30.

I missed an entire day of my vacation by arriving in the middle of the night instead of at lunchtime. I paid for parking, a car rental and a hotel night that I didn’t use.

I’d like WOW to refund the ticket and pay me $670, the amount I’m owed under EU 261, the European consumer protection regulation. I’ve asked the airline, but it refuses to refund the ticket or pay any compensati­on. Can you help me? — Rachael Lopez, Mission Viejo

ANSWER >> WOW should have advised you of the delay, which would have allowed you to avoid the hassle of returning home and then coming back to the airport the next day. But that’s not always possible. Maybe WOW was hopeful that a delay of the inbound aircraft could have been avoided, and advised you to get to LAX on time. I want to believe that WOW had the best of intentions.

Your request for a ticket refund isn’t doable. That’s because in the end, WOW transporte­d you from L.A. to Reykjavik, thereby fulfilling its legal obligation under its ticket contract. In other words, it got you from point A to point B, as promised.

It just didn’t do it when it promised, and that means it ran afoul of EU 261. Under that rule, you were entitled to real money for the delay — unless WOW could prove that there were “extraordin­ary” circumstan­ces that led to the delay. And that, it could not.

The next time you have a lengthy delay, make sure you ask the airline immediatel­y if it can authorize meal vouchers, hotel vouchers or phone cards. Don’t wait for it to offer you overnight accommodat­ions, which seems to be what happened to you. Ask. Most airlines include provisions for food and accommodat­ions in their contracts of carriage, which can be found online.

I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the WOW Air customer-service managers on my consumer-advocacy site: www.elliott.org/company-contacts/wow-air. After the first no, I would have appealed to one of these executives in writing.

I contacted WOW on your behalf. You also contacted the executives, and eventually the airline paid you the $670 owed under EU 261.

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