Flight Delayed or Canceled at Detroit Airport?
Check What You're Owed.
DTW is Delta's second-largest hub and faces harsh Great Lakes winters including heavy snow and lake-effect events. DOT rules give you the right to a cash refund for significant delays. Check now.
Check My DTW Flight$19 flat fee for refund and reimbursement claims. No win, no fee for denied boarding.
Airlines operating at Detroit
Click any airline to see carrier-specific compensation rights and filing instructions.
Your rights for Detroit flight disruptions
Under US DOT rules, your rights do not depend on the reason for the disruption. They apply to all carriers on US-departing flights.
Refund
100%
Full cash refund to your original payment method for any canceled flight or significant delay where you choose not to travel. Applies regardless of ticket type including Basic Economy.
Expense reimbursement
For controllable delays and cancellations, airlines with DOT customer commitments must reimburse reasonable out-of-pocket expenses: meals during a delay of 3+ hours, and hotel plus transport for controllable overnight delays.
Denied boarding (IDB)
Up to $1,550
If an airline involuntarily bumps you from an oversold flight, DOT mandates cash compensation of up to $775 or $1,550 depending on how long you are delayed to your destination.
Why flights get delayed at Detroit
Detroit sees significant lake-effect snow events from Lake Erie and Lake Huron, and harsh ice storms that create multi-day disruptions.
- 1.Lake-effect snow from Lake Erie and Lake Huron (November through February): intense localized snowfall can deposit significant accumulations rapidly
- 2.Ice storms and freezing rain: the transition zone between Great Lakes weather systems creates frequent freezing precipitation events
- 3.Winter low-visibility conditions: Great Lakes fog and ice fog reduce approach minimums and slow arrival rates
- 4.Delta hub cascades: DTW is Delta's second-largest hub and winter events cascade through Delta's national network
- 5.Summer thunderstorm lines tracking across the Great Lakes region
Weather delays do not eliminate your right to a refund if you choose not to travel.
How far back can you claim?
US DOT
1 year
Practical filing window for refund and reimbursement claims.
EU261 (return legs)
2-6 years
Varies by EU country. France: 5yr. Germany: 3yr. Netherlands: 2yr.
UK261 (return legs)
6 years
England and Wales: 6yr. Scotland: 5yr.
Past flights qualify. If you have the flight number and date, it is worth checking.
How to claim compensation for a Detroit flight disruption
Check your eligibility
Find your flight number and date for your Detroit disruption. Significant delays (3+ hours domestic, 6+ hours international) and cancellations where you chose not to travel qualify for a refund. Denied boarding due to overbooking qualifies for cash compensation.
Gather your documents
You need your booking confirmation or e-ticket number, the flight number and date, any receipts for out-of-pocket expenses (meals, hotel, transport), and your boarding pass if you have it.
Submit to the airline
File your refund or reimbursement claim with the carrier directly. Be specific: state the DOT rule, the amount owed, and your original payment method. Vague requests get delayed or ignored.
Follow up and escalate if needed
If the airline ignores your claim, sends a form denial, or offers a voucher instead of cash, file a complaint with the DOT at transportation.gov/airconsumer. Most airlines respond once a federal complaint is filed.
What to have ready
- ✓Booking confirmation or e-ticket
- ✓Flight number and date
- ✓Receipts for out-of-pocket expenses
- ✓Boarding pass (if available)
Where to escalate
If the airline ignores your claim or offers a voucher instead of cash, escalate to the DOT. Airlines respond to federal complaints.
US DOT Air Consumer
File at transportation.gov/airconsumer. Reference the specific DOT rule, your flight number, and any prior airline response.
Or skip all this.
TravelStacks files directly with the airline, follows up when they go quiet, escalates denials, and files regulatory complaints when needed. You do not touch a form.
Simple, fair pricing
AirHelp charges 35%. We charge 25%, or $19 flat for refunds.
Refunds and reimbursement
$19
flat fee
$19 covers your full DOT-mandated refund and expense reimbursement claim. Flat fee regardless of what you recover.
Denied boarding (IDB)
25%
of recovery
DOT mandates up to $1,550. We take 25% only if we win. Nothing owed if we don't.
EU and UK flights
25%
of recovery
EU261 and UK261 up to €600 / £520. We take 25% only if we win. Nothing owed if we don't.
Detroit flight delays, frequently asked questions
Your Detroit flight already happened.
Don’t leave money on the table.
It takes 30 seconds to check. We handle everything else.
Check My DTW Flight$19 flat fee for refund and reimbursement claims.