Katowice-Pyrzowice (KTW) Flight Compensation — EU 261 Rights from Poland's Charter Hub

Delayed or cancelled flight from Katowice-Pyrzowice (KTW)? Claim €250–€600 under EU 261. RPP/ULC, Sąd Rejonowy in Tarnowskie Góry, 10-year prescription.

If your flight from, to or within Katowice-Pyrzowice International Airport (KTW) was delayed by three hours or more, cancelled with less than 14 days notice, or you were denied boarding against your will, EU Regulation 261/2004 entitles you to fixed compensation of €250, €400 or €600 — provided the disruption was within the airline's control. KTW is Poland's third-busiest airport, the main Wizz Air base in the Silesia region, and the country's leading hub for holiday charters to Greece, Spain, Egypt and Turkey. That traffic mix shapes the typical claim. This guide walks through every step of recovering money for a disrupted KTW flight, with the Polish escalation path: a free complaint to the Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów (RPP) at the ULC, and — if needed — a civil lawsuit before the Sąd Rejonowy in Tarnowskie Góry, which has territorial jurisdiction over the airport. Polish version of this guide: opóźniony lot Katowice .

Why Katowice-Pyrzowice generates so many EU 261 claims

KTW handles around 5.5 million passengers a year and is structurally exposed to the kinds of disruption that trigger EU 261 compensation more often than the average European airport.

First, Wizz Air operates its largest Polish base here, ahead of Warsaw, Gdańsk and Kraków. The low-cost model relies on rapid aircraft rotation — when a morning flight runs late, the delay propagates through the day, and the threshold for the €400 payout (a three-hour delay at final destination) is easy to cross by the third or fourth leg.

Second, KTW is the country's charter capital. In the summer season more than half of all departures are package holidays to the Mediterranean and Red Sea operated by Enter Air, SmartLynx, Smartwings, Corendon Airlines and TUI Fly. Package passengers often assume EU 261 does not apply to them; it does, and the operating carrier (not the tour operator) is the addressee of the compensation claim.

Third, winter weather at the Silesian airport — fog, snow and freezing rain — is a frequent excuse for delay. The excuse is not always valid: under Wallentin-Hermann (C-549/07, 2008) and the long line of CJEU rulings that followed, the airline carries the burden of proving that the weather actually caused the delay and that all reasonable measures were taken.

How much you can claim — €250, €400 or €600

The amount turns entirely on the great-circle distance of the disrupted flight, not on what the ticket cost. From Katowice-Pyrzowice, the typical brackets are:

Distance bracket

Compensation

Example KTW routes

Up to 1,500 km

€250

Warsaw, Berlin, Vienna, Frankfurt, Brussels, London (short of 1,500 km from KTW)

1,500–3,500 km (intra-EU over 1,500 km, or any 1,500–3,500 km)

€400

Athens, Heraklion, Malaga, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife, Reykjavik

Over 3,500 km (outside EU)

€600

Hurghada, Sharm el-Sheikh, Dubai, Marrakech, Marsa Alam, Punta Cana (rare ad-hoc)

The amount is fixed and independent of the ticket price. A passenger who paid €29 on a Wizz Air sale to Malaga gets the same €400 as a passenger who paid €350 for the last seat the day before departure. This is the principle the Court of Justice confirmed in Sturgeon (joined cases C-402/07 and C-432/07, 2009) : the fixed compensation is an autonomous remedy that does not depend on proof of actual financial loss.

The carrier may reduce the payout by 50% if it re-routes you to your final destination with arrival no more than 2, 3 or 4 hours late (depending on the distance bracket) — but only when re-routing is offered, not as a discretionary cut.

When you qualify — the three triggers

You qualify for the fixed compensation when at least one of the following has happened to a flight from, to or within KTW:

  • Arrival delay of three hours or more at final destination. The trigger is the moment the cabin doors open, not the moment the aircraft touches down. Sturgeon (C-402/07, 2009) is the founding case.
  • Cancellation with less than 14 days notice. The threshold is calendar days before scheduled departure, counted strictly. A flight cancelled on the 15th day before departure does not qualify; on the 13th, it does.
  • Denied boarding against your will. Most often this is overbooking, but it also covers downgrades of equipment or operational reshuffles. Voluntary "give up your seat" volunteers who accepted a voucher are not denied — those who insisted on flying and were refused, are.

The trigger alone is not enough. The carrier can escape payment by proving extraordinary circumstances — but the bar is high, and the burden of proof sits entirely on the airline. We have a dedicated page on what counts and what does not: extraordinary circumstances .

Polish escalation path — RPP, ULC and the Sąd Rejonowy in Tarnowskie Góry

The procedure for a KTW passenger has three stages, and you can stop at any one of them if the airline pays.

Stage 1 — written demand to the airline. Send a registered letter or formal email to the carrier's complaints address with: your booking reference, the flight number and date, a clear statement that you demand fixed compensation under Article 7 of EU 261/2004 for the relevant amount, your bank account (IBAN) and a 30-day deadline. Most refusals or silence at this stage are part of a deliberate filter — pre-litigation lawyers in Warsaw report that under 40% of valid claims are paid voluntarily at first ask.

Stage 2 — Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów (RPP) at the ULC. After 30 days of silence or refusal, file a free complaint with the Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów (the Passenger Rights Ombudsman) at the Urząd Lotnictwa Cywilnego — online at pasazerlotniczy.ulc.gov.pl, by email or by post to ul. Marcina Flisa 2, 02-247 Warszawa. The RPP issues an opinion (a non-binding administrative finding), and while it cannot force the airline to pay, a favourable opinion is solid evidence for the next stage.

Stage 3 — civil lawsuit before the Sąd Rejonowy in Tarnowskie Góry. Katowice-Pyrzowice airport lies in the municipality of Ożarowice within Tarnowskie Góry county, so the local district court has territorial jurisdiction. Per Rehder (C-204/08, 2009) you also have the option to sue at the airport of arrival. Court fees for claims under PLN 2,000 are PLN 30–100 and the case runs in the simplified procedure (postępowanie uproszczone). A lawyer is not required, although a successful claim usually has its legal costs reimbursed by the airline.

How long you have to file — the Polish 10-year prescription

Under Article 118 of the Polish Civil Code (Kodeks cywilny) , the general prescription period for civil claims that do not arise from business activity of the claimant is ten years. EU 261 claims by passengers fall squarely within this category.

The Court of Justice confirmed in Cuadrench Moré (C-139/11, 2013) that national prescription rules apply to EU 261 claims and that the Member State's general civil limitation period is the correct benchmark. So a passenger who flew from KTW in June 2026 has until June 2036 to sue. Filing an RPP complaint or sending a registered written demand to the airline can also interrupt the running of the period.

This 10-year window is one of the most generous in the European Union — Germany allows three years, France five — and it gives Polish passengers a lot of room to gather documents before deciding to litigate.

Charter flights from KTW — who you actually claim from

Around half of KTW summer traffic is package holidays. The legal architecture splits the responsibilities cleanly:

  • The operating carrier (the airline whose pilots actually flew the aircraft) is the EU 261 defendant. For a TUI package the operating carrier might be Enter Air, SmartLynx or TUI fly Belgium; for an Itaka package, often Enter Air or Smartwings. Check your boarding pass — the IATA code that appears next to the flight number is the operating carrier.
  • The tour operator (TUI, Itaka, Coral Travel, Rainbow, Grecos, Net Holiday) handles the package-travel side: refunds for unused hotel nights, price reduction for substandard service, transfers and excursions. Polish package travel claims fall under the Ustawa o imprezach turystycznych.

The €250–€600 EU 261 amount goes to you, the passenger — not to the tour operator — and is paid by the airline. A frequent trap: the tour operator offers a 10% voucher and asks you to sign a settlement releasing all claims. Do not sign anything that mentions "all claims" or "any further demands". Sign only documents that explicitly relate to the hotel or transfer issue.

Choosing your path — DIY or claim service

You have three realistic ways to recover money for a KTW disruption:

  1. DIY. Free apart from court fees (PLN 30–100). You write the airline, file the RPP complaint if needed, and sue if needed. Best for organised travellers who keep documents and are comfortable drafting a pozew in Polish.
  2. A Polish law firm on a no-win-no-fee basis. Typical commission is 25–35% plus the recovered legal costs. Best when the claim involves several passengers or the airline has already refused.
  3. An international claim-management platform. Same logic as a law firm, usually 25–35% commission, but with the advantage of multilingual handling for foreign carriers, EU-wide reach and faster initial filing — typically the right pick when you live abroad, when the airline is non-EU, or when you would rather hand the file off entirely.

For Polish passengers based in Silesia who fly KTW often, the third path is the lowest-friction choice. A widely used option in this market:

File your KTW claim with AirHelp — no-win-no-fee, free check in 3 minutes

For a deeper comparison of DIY vs paid claim services, see our guide on whether to claim yourself or use a service .

When you will not get the fixed compensation

The carrier escapes the €250–€600 if it proves extraordinary circumstances — events outside its normal operation and beyond its control, even with all reasonable measures taken. From a KTW perspective the realistic categories are:

  • Severe weather at KTW or the destination airport (fog, snowstorm, freezing fog, lightning). The proof bar is high — the airline must show that no carrier flew that route in that window.
  • Airspace closures (military activity, sudden ATC restrictions). Note that a strike by the airline's own crew is not extraordinary under Krüsemann (C-195/17, 2018) — an external ATC strike is a closer call.
  • Bird strike can be extraordinary depending on the specifics; see Pesková (C-315/15, 2017).
  • Political instability or terrorist threat at the destination — rare on KTW routes but occasionally invoked for Egypt and Israel.

What the airline cannot hide behind: technical defects (Wallentin-Hermann, C-549/07, 2008), crew shortages, commercial decisions to cancel an under-sold flight, late inbound aircraft caused by its own earlier disruption, or a wildcat strike by its own staff (Krüsemann, C-195/17, 2018).

Quick action checklist for a disrupted KTW flight

If you are still at the terminal or just landed late, the next two hours decide how easy the claim will be later.

  1. Photograph the departure board at KTW showing "Delayed" or "Cancelled" with a timestamp.
  2. Keep your boarding pass and any re-booking documents. Save SMS and email notifications from the airline.
  3. Ask the airline desk — in writing — for the cause of the disruption. Do not accept "operational reasons" as an answer; demand a specific factual cause.
  4. Insist on meals, drinks and (for overnight delays) a hotel and transfers. This is the airline's duty of care under Article 9 EU 261 and applies even in extraordinary circumstances.
  5. Refuse vouchers in place of cash compensation. A voucher is only valid if you give written, informed consent in advance.
  6. After 30 days of airline silence or refusal, file with the RPP at pasazerlotniczy.ulc.gov.pl.
  7. If the RPP route does not produce payment within three months, file the pozew at the Sąd Rejonowy in Tarnowskie Góry — or hand the file to a claim service.

You have ten years. Use that time to gather documents, not to wait for the airline to volunteer.