Schedule change vs cancellation vs delay
Schedule change: the airline moves departure time or date before you travel, often weeks ahead, usually keeping the same flight number. Governed by contract terms — BA, easyJet, Ryanair, Virgin, Jet2 each define "minor" vs "significant" thresholds differently.
Schedule change: the airline moves departure time or date before you travel, often weeks ahead, usually keeping the same flight number. Governed by contract terms — BA, easyJet, Ryanair, Virgin, Jet2 each define "minor" vs "significant" thresholds differently.
Cancellation in law: often indicated by a flight number change or withdrawn service — triggers UK261 rights to refund or re-routing, and potentially £220–£520 compensation per passenger if notified within 14 days of departure and not due to extraordinary circumstances.
Operational delay on the day: weather, crew, technical — covered by UK261 delay rules and duty of care, not this guide. See /hubs/flight-delay-passenger-rights.
Significant change thresholds by UK airline
British Airways: significant schedule change generally 2+ hours from original departure — refund or rebook offered.
British Airways: significant schedule change generally 2+ hours from original departure — refund or rebook offered.
easyJet: 5+ hours movement typically treated as significant — full refund or move to another flight.
Ryanair: 3+ hours from scheduled departure under their policy — refund or reroute options.
Virgin Atlantic: 12+ hours for significant change classification — check current T&Cs at booking.
Jet2 and TUI: commonly 5+ hours — package customers contact tour operator; flight-only via airline portal.
Always read the email and "manage booking" page — thresholds update in T&Cs. Ask the airline in writing whether the original flight was cancelled if the flight number changed.
What you can ask for — and what you cannot
On significant changes: full refund of unused tickets on that booking, or alternative flight to destination (airline-defined "comparable" routing). You are not automatically entitled to hotel or car hire cost reimbursement for non-refundable plans — ask suppliers for goodwill refunds anyway.
On significant changes: full refund of unused tickets on that booking, or alternative flight to destination (airline-defined "comparable" routing). You are not automatically entitled to hotel or car hire cost reimbursement for non-refundable plans — ask suppliers for goodwill refunds anyway.
On minor changes: generally must accept or cancel under standard fare rules (often non-refundable on cheapest tickets). Explain personal hardship — medical needs, tight connections, wedding dates — airlines sometimes upgrade you to significant-change treatment.
Refund-then-rebook trick: before accepting an airline alternative, search the same route as a new customer. Forum cases show £100+ savings when walk-up fares dropped after the schedule change — take the refund and rebook if cheaper.
When UK261 compensation enters the picture
If the schedule change is legally a cancellation (especially flight number change) and you are notified less than 14 days before departure, UK261 cancellation compensation may apply alongside refund/re-routing rights — unless extraordinary circumstances or the airline re-routes within statutory time windows.
If the schedule change is legally a cancellation (especially flight number change) and you are notified less than 14 days before departure, UK261 cancellation compensation may apply alongside refund/re-routing rights — unless extraordinary circumstances or the airline re-routes within statutory time windows.
Pure schedule changes with 14+ days notice: no UK261 compensation even if inconvenient — but refund rights under significant-change policies may still apply.
If you accept a rebooked flight and travel, you generally waive cancellation compensation for that disruption — understand the trade-off before clicking accept. See /guides/flight-cancellation-refund-rights-uk-2026 and /guides/uk261-flight-delay-compensation-uk.
Booked via agent or OTA?
Airlines may email the agent, not you — ensure correct contact details at booking. Agents must pass schedule change notices; delays in relay are common. For Section 75 and UK261, the operating airline still holds passenger rights — but refunds may route through the agent.
Airlines may email the agent, not you — ensure correct contact details at booking. Agents must pass schedule change notices; delays in relay are common. For Section 75 and UK261, the operating airline still holds passenger rights — but refunds may route through the agent.
DIY bookings on airline.com simplify schedule change management. See /guides/how-to-book-flights-uk-2026 for direct vs OTA trade-offs.