If your flight from Warsaw Modlin Airport (IATA code WMI) arrived more than three hours late at the final destination, was cancelled, or you were denied boarding, EU Regulation 261/2004 gives you a fixed right to EUR 250 or EUR 400 in compensation. Modlin is a single-carrier airport — well over 95% of scheduled traffic is Ryanair (with Buzz operating part of the network) — so in practice the claim almost always lands with the same Irish low-cost group. The flat amount has nothing to do with what you paid for the ticket, and the airline will not volunteer it: you have to ask.
This guide explains how the EU 261 right applies to flights leaving Modlin, what amount you can claim for each typical route, how to push back when Ryanair refuses, and exactly which Polish institutions — the Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów at the ULC, the Sąd Rejonowy — handle escalation when the airline goes silent.
Modlin in one paragraph — operator, terminal, traffic
Warsaw Modlin Mazovia Airport (Mazowiecki Port Lotniczy Warszawa-Modlin) sits in Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, around 40 km north of Warsaw city centre. The airport is run by Mazowiecki Port Lotniczy Warszawa-Modlin sp. z o.o. (jointly owned by Polish state aviation entities and regional partners) and operates a single runway and a single passenger terminal. Pre-pandemic and again from 2023 onwards Modlin handles roughly three million passengers a year. Ryanair (IATA: FR) is the dominant scheduled carrier, with its Polish subsidiary Buzz Polska flying part of the network on behalf of the group. Communication about compensation, including for routes marked "operated by Buzz", normally runs through Ryanair channels.
Compensation is not the same as a refund
The single most common confusion in the entire topic, and the one Ryanair's automated email replies rarely separate clearly.
Compensation under Article 7 of Regulation 261/2004 is a flat-rate sum paid for the inconvenience of a long delay, a cancellation, or denied boarding. For Modlin routes that is EUR 250 or EUR 400.
A refund under Article 8 is something else: the price of the ticket returned to you, because you no longer want to (or can) travel. You receive a refund when a flight is cancelled and you choose not to be rerouted, or when a long delay leaves you with the right to abandon the journey altogether.
The two rights are independent. A refund does not extinguish the fixed compensation. A voucher offered "as a gesture" does not extinguish it either, unless you sign an explicit settlement waiving the right. A third, separate instrument is additional damages under Article 12 — actual out-of-pocket losses such as the non-refundable first night of a hotel, a missed pre-paid tour, or the Warsaw–Modlin transfer when the flight is cancelled.
What the EU 261 amount looks like from Modlin
Modlin only handles short and medium-haul European and a handful of North African / Middle Eastern routes, so realistically only the first two distance bands apply.
| Flight distance | Compensation | Roughly in PLN | Typical Modlin routes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to 1,500 km | EUR 250 | around PLN 1,100 | Modlin–Stansted, Modlin–Dublin, Modlin–Bergamo, Modlin–Cologne |
| 1,500 – 3,500 km | EUR 400 | around PLN 1,750 | Modlin–Malaga, Modlin–Lanzarote, Modlin–Marrakech, Modlin–Tel Aviv |
Article 7 of Regulation 261/2004 sets the figures in euros. The PLN equivalent moves with the NBP rate, so treat the złoty column as guidance. What counts for triggering the right is the arrival delay at the final destination, not what the aircraft did at pushback. The three-hour threshold itself does not appear in the 2004 text — the CJEU built it in Sturgeon (joined cases C-402/07 and C-432/07, 2009), holding that a passenger arriving three or more hours late is to be treated on equal footing with a passenger whose flight was cancelled.
EU 261 covers every departure from Modlin
A typical pushback letter from Ryanair claims, in different forms, that "as an Irish carrier the dispute belongs in Ireland." That is not how the rules work.
Regulation 261/2004 covers every flight departing from an EU airport, regardless of the airline's home base. A Ryanair departure from Modlin to Stansted, Dublin, Bergamo or Malaga is fully within scope because Modlin is a Union airport. The same is true on the return leg, because Ryanair is itself an EU carrier registered in Ireland. Modlin does not host any scheduled flights operated by non-EU carriers, so the narrower scope limit (non-EU carrier on a non-EU arrival) does not arise here in practice.
Jurisdiction is equally clear. The Court of Justice of the EU confirmed in Rehder (C-204/08, 2009) that a passenger may bring an EU 261 claim at the court of either the departure or the arrival airport. For a flight from Modlin, the Polish Sąd Rejonowy with jurisdiction over Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki is competent — you do not have to chase Ryanair to Dublin.
Typical causes of delay from Modlin — and which ones let the airline off
Modlin's operational profile is specific enough to recognise the patterns that drive the bulk of WMI delays. Knowing them up front helps you read the airline's defence letter properly.
- Rotational delays cascading from UK or Italian bases. Aircraft commonly start the day at Stansted, Manchester, Bergamo or Pisa and reach Modlin late. A late inbound is a Ryanair-side scheduling and rotation issue, not an extraordinary circumstance. The CJEU in Wallentin-Hermann (C-549/07, 2008) ruled that issues belonging to the normal operation of an aircraft do not qualify as extraordinary.
- Crew strikes within the Ryanair group. Pilots and cabin crew in Belgium, Spain, Italy, Germany and Portugal have run industrial action over recent seasons. The CJEU's ruling in Krüsemann (C-195/17, 2018) is direct: a strike by the carrier's own crew is part of normal commercial risk and does not relieve the carrier of compensation. Ryanair often refuses on this ground in the first round, but the RPP and Polish district courts apply Krüsemann reliably.
- ATC strikes — typically French. Many westbound routes cross French airspace, where SNCTA controllers strike several times a year. A strike by an external body of public-sector controllers is a classic extraordinary circumstance, so the compensation may fall away. The duty of care under Article 9 (meals, calls, hotel) still applies, regardless of cause.
- Technical defects framed as "extraordinary." A frequent Ryanair line is that a fault was "unforeseen and unavoidable." The CJEU has been blunt: technical defects discovered during normal operation are not extraordinary (Wallentin-Hermann), and a malfunction surfacing during routine maintenance is not extraordinary either, per van der Lans (C-257/14, 2015). Demand a written, specific explanation — a one-line "technical reasons" reply is not sufficient.
- Fog and icing in autumn and winter. Modlin sits on the Mazovian plain and records meaningful low-visibility days from October to February. Genuine extreme weather is extraordinary, but the Article 9 duty of care continues.
How to file the claim against Ryanair — step by step
The process is procedurally simple. The friction is in how the airline replies.
- Secure documentation immediately. Boarding pass (Ryanair emails it), booking reference (PNR), flight number (FR-xxxx), date, scheduled vs actual arrival time at destination, and receipts for any meals, transfers or hotel during the wait. Cross-check the actual arrival on FlightAware or Flightradar24.
- File the claim with Ryanair. Use ryanair.com → Help → Contact us → EU261 compensation. State explicitly that you are claiming compensation under Regulation (EC) No 261/2004, Article 7, and quote the amount (EUR 250 or EUR 400) and the route.
- Request a written reason for the disruption. Without that, it is difficult to challenge any later "extraordinary circumstances" defence.
- Allow 30 days for a substantive reply. Polish consumer practice expects a written response inside that window. A blanket refusal in the first round is common — it is not the final word.
- Escalate. If Ryanair refuses or stays silent, the Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów (RPP) at the Urząd Lotnictwa Cywilnego (ULC) runs the free alternative dispute resolution procedure. If that does not produce settlement, the Sąd Rejonowy with jurisdiction over Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki hears the civil claim in simplified procedure (PLN 100 court fee for claims up to PLN 4,000).
For step-by-step help with the calculator, see our EU 261 air passenger rights guide , and for the Polish-language original of this page see Odszkodowanie za opóźniony lot z Modlina .
Check your Modlin flight in 2 minutes — claim up to EUR 400 with no win, no fee
The Polish escalation route: RPP, ULC, Sąd Rejonowy
For any flight departing Modlin the escalation chain is well-defined.
- Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów (RPP) — an ombudsman unit at the ULC running free ADR (alternative dispute resolution) for EU 261 disputes involving flights from Polish airports or Polish-operated flights. Applications can be filed online in Polish or English. The proposed settlement is non-binding, but most carriers do engage.
- Urząd Lotnictwa Cywilnego (ULC) — the Polish Civil Aviation Authority, the supervisory regulator. The ULC does not adjudicate individual claims but can impose administrative fines on carriers for systemic mishandling of passenger rights. Ryanair has been fined in past years on this basis.
- Sąd Rejonowy — the District Court. For Modlin departures the territorially competent court is the one for Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki (the location of the airport). The simplified procedure (postępowanie uproszczone) is designed for low-value money claims and the fee scale runs from PLN 100 (up to PLN 4,000 in dispute) through PLN 200 and PLN 400 for higher values. CJEU Rehder (C-204/08, 2009) also lets you sue at the arrival airport's court if both are in the EU.
- Federacja Konsumentów and the local Miejski Rzecznik Konsumentów — free consumer-law assistance, useful when drafting the first letter or appealing a refusal.
Polish prescription period — one of the longest in the EU
Ryanair's general conditions of carriage include a two-year contractual deadline (currently around clause 15.2). Polish jurisprudence consistently treats that clause as unenforceable insofar as it tries to shorten the statutory prescription period.
Polish civil law gives passengers an unusually long window. Article 118 of the Kodeks cywilny set the general prescription period for monetary claims at 10 years for claims that arose before the 9 July 2018 reform, and 6 years for claims after that (subject to the year-end rounding rule). For air-passenger compensation specifically, some courts apply the one-year carriage-contract rule from Article 778 KC, others the consumer-law six-year period. Either way, the CJEU confirmed in Cuadrench Moré (C-139/11, 2013) that EU 261 deadlines are set by national prescription rules — the airline cannot shorten them in its terms and conditions. Practically, file the written claim inside one year to stay safe under every possible reading, but the older ten-year window is still relevant for historical claims surfaced under transitional rules.
This page is not legal advice
This guide draws on the consolidated text of Regulation (EC) No 261/2004 and the CJEU rulings cited above, alongside Polish institutional sources. It is general information, not an assessment of your individual case. For binding advice, contact the Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów at the Urząd Lotnictwa Cywilnego, the Federacja Konsumentów, or a Polish adwokat or radca prawny specialising in air passenger law.
Self-claim or use a passenger-rights service
The Ryanair claim from Modlin is free to pursue on your own. It requires patience — first-round refusals are routine — but you keep the full amount. A passenger-rights service (claim-tech) will handle the paperwork and any litigation on a commission of around 20–35% of the recovered sum, with payment only after a successful claim. The choice usually comes down to how much of the back-and-forth you want to handle personally.
Frequently asked questions
How much compensation can I claim for a delayed flight from Modlin?
EUR 250 or EUR 400 depending on the route distance. Modlin's short routes — Stansted, Dublin, Bergamo, Cologne — fall under 1,500 km and trigger EUR 250. Medium-haul routes (Malaga, Lanzarote, Marrakech, Tel Aviv) are between 1,500 and 3,500 km and trigger EUR 400. The delay must be at least three hours at arrival to the final destination.
Where do I file a flight compensation claim for a Modlin flight in Poland?
Start with a written claim to the operating carrier — Ryanair in practice — via the EU 261 form on ryanair.com. If the airline refuses or stays silent after 30 days, escalate to the Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów at the ULC, which runs the free ADR procedure. If ADR fails, file in the Sąd Rejonowy with jurisdiction over Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, where Modlin is located.
Is the Ryanair two-year claim deadline valid for flights from Modlin?
Polish courts do not enforce it as a shortening of the statutory prescription period. The CJEU confirmed in Cuadrench Moré (C-139/11, 2013) that national prescription rules govern EU 261 claims, and Polish law gives passengers up to 10 years under the old Article 118 of the Kodeks cywilny for older claims, with reduced periods after the 2018 reform. A two-year contractual clause cannot override that.
Does a Ryanair crew strike cancel my right to compensation from Modlin?
No. The CJEU held in Krüsemann (C-195/17, 2018) that a strike by the airline's own crew is part of normal commercial risk and is not an extraordinary circumstance. Ryanair often refuses on this basis in the first reply, but the RPP and the Polish district courts apply Krüsemann reliably and award the compensation.
Can I get reimbursed for the bus or train fare from Warsaw to Modlin if my flight is cancelled?
Yes, when the cancellation was notified with less than 14 days' notice and the transfer was a real expense (KM train plus airport shuttle, or a direct bus from Warszawa Zachodnia). That cost is recoverable as additional damages under Article 12 of Regulation 261/2004, on top of the fixed compensation. For a flight that still operates but arrives late, the transfer is not refundable, because the delay did not cause that cost. Keep all tickets and receipts either way.
Which court handles a Modlin flight claim?
The Sąd Rejonowy with territorial jurisdiction over Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, where Modlin Airport is located, is the default court. Following the CJEU ruling in Rehder (C-204/08, 2009) you may also sue at the court of the arrival airport, if both endpoints are in the EU. Simplified procedure (postępowanie uproszczone) applies, with a court fee starting at PLN 100 for claims up to PLN 4,000.
Sources and further reading
- Regulation (EC) No 261/2004 — consolidated text on EUR-Lex
- Court of Justice of the EU — Sturgeon and Others, joined cases C-402/07 and C-432/07 (2009): three-hour rule, delay measured at arrival
- Court of Justice of the EU — Wallentin-Hermann (C-549/07, 2008): technical defects are not extraordinary circumstances
- Court of Justice of the EU — van der Lans (C-257/14, 2015): malfunction during routine maintenance is not extraordinary
- Court of Justice of the EU — Krüsemann (C-195/17, 2018): wildcat crew strike is not extraordinary
- Court of Justice of the EU — Rehder (C-204/08, 2009): jurisdiction at the airport of departure or arrival
- Court of Justice of the EU — Cuadrench Moré (C-139/11, 2013): national prescription periods govern EU 261 claims
- Urząd Lotnictwa Cywilnego (ULC) — the Polish Civil Aviation Authority
- Rzecznik Praw Pasażerów — Passenger Rights Ombudsman, free ADR
- Kodeks cywilny art. 118 and art. 778 — Polish civil law prescription periods
- Mazowiecki Port Lotniczy Warszawa-Modlin — airport operator information
Last reviewed: 2 June 2026.