FCOLeonardo da Vinci International Airport

Flight Delayed or Canceled at Rome Fiumicino?
Check What You're Owed.

Rome Fiumicino is Italy's busiest airport and a hub for ITA Airways, with routes across Europe and to North America. EU261 entitles you to up to €600 per person. Italy applies a 2-year claim window. Check now.

Check My FCO Flight

EU261 compensation up to €600 per person. No win, no fee.

Airlines operating at Fiumicino

Click any airline to see carrier-specific compensation rights and filing instructions.

Your rights for Fiumicino flight disruptions

EU261 applies to all flights departing Fiumicino, regardless of airline nationality or passenger nationality.

US DOT may also apply on US-departing legs

If your itinerary includes a US-departing segment, US DOT refund rules apply to that leg. A cancellation or significant delay on the US portion entitles you to a full cash refund to your original payment method, separate from any EU261 claim.

Fixed compensation

€600

EU261 entitles you to €250, €400, or €600 per person depending on flight distance. Applies for delays of 3 or more hours at your final destination and for cancellations with less than 14 days notice.

Refund

100%

Full refund of your ticket price if you choose not to travel on a canceled or significantly delayed flight. This is separate from and in addition to fixed compensation.

Duty of care

During delays of 2 or more hours, the airline must provide meals and refreshments. For overnight delays, hotel accommodation and transport to and from the hotel are required. These rights apply regardless of the cause, including weather.

Why flights get delayed at Fiumicino

Fiumicino experiences frequent afternoon thunderstorms in summer and has a history of ground handling and staffing disruptions that generate EU261-claimable delays.

  • 1.Summer afternoon thunderstorms: the Tyrrhenian coastal area around Rome is prone to intense afternoon convective thunderstorms from June through September
  • 2.Ground handling capacity: Fiumicino has historically been rated among the lowest-performing major EU airports for ground handling reliability, contributing to controllable delays
  • 3.ATC en-route restrictions: Italian airspace sectors become congested during peak summer, causing departure holds for northbound and transatlantic flights
  • 4.Airport infrastructure strain: FCO handles over 40 million passengers per year through facilities that were not designed for current volumes
  • 5.ITA Airways operational disruptions: Italy's national carrier has experienced operational difficulties since the Alitalia transition, resulting in higher-than-average cancellation rates

Weather delays do not eliminate your right to a refund if you choose not to travel.

How far back can you claim?

EU261

2 years

Limitation period under national law of the departure country. Past flights qualify.

US DOT (US legs)

1 year

Practical filing window for any US-departing segment on the same itinerary.

Past flights qualify. If you have the flight number and date, it is worth checking.

How to claim compensation for a Fiumicino flight disruption

  1. Check your eligibility

    Confirm your Fiumicino flight departed from Italy and was delayed 3 or more hours at the final destination, canceled with less than 14 days notice, or resulted in denied boarding. EU261 applies to all carriers departing from Fiumicino.

  2. Gather your documents

    You need your booking confirmation or e-ticket number, the flight number and date, evidence of the disruption (delay notification, flight tracking record), receipts for any out-of-pocket expenses, and your boarding pass.

  3. Submit your EU261 claim

    File your claim directly with the airline, citing EU261 by name. State the exact compensation amount (€250 / €400 / €600 depending on flight distance) and request a written response within 14 days. Vague requests are routinely delayed.

  4. Escalate to the enforcement body if denied

    If the airline rejects your claim or does not respond within 8 weeks, escalate to the National Enforcement Body. This body has authority to compel airlines to pay and handles cases for free.

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 denies your claim or does not respond within 8 weeks, escalate to the National Enforcement Body. Enforcement bodies handle claims for free.

National Enforcement Body

File with the National Enforcement Body of the departure country. Each EU member state has its own NEB. Free for passengers.

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%. On a €600 claim, that is €150 more in your pocket.

EU261 compensation

25%

of recovery

EU261 entitles you to up to €600 per person. We take 25% only if we win. AirHelp charges 35%.

Refund claim

25%

of recovery

Full ticket refund for canceled or significantly changed flights. We handle the submission, follow-up, and escalation.

Denied boarding

25%

of recovery

EU261 mandates fixed compensation for involuntary denied boarding. We take 25% only if we win. Nothing owed if we do not.

Fiumicino flight delays, frequently asked questions

Your Fiumicino flight already happened.
Don’t leave money on the table.

It takes 30 seconds to check. We handle everything else.

Check My FCO Flight

EU261 compensation up to €600 per person. No win, no fee.