Air Corsica Flight Delayed or Cancelled? Compensation Guide
Updated June 2026 · EU261/UK261 rules applied to Air Corsica's network
Flight with Air Corsica delayed or cancelled? Depending on the route, Air Corsica may owe you between €250 and €600 in fixed compensation under air passenger rights law — and airlines rarely volunteer that information at the gate. Air Corsica is the regional airline of Corsica, majority owned by Corsican public authorities with Air France holding a minority stake.
The airline links Ajaccio, Bastia, Calvi and Figari with mainland French cities, operating Airbus A320s alongside ATR turboprops. Below you will find when Air Corsica flights are covered, what each distance band pays, and an honest comparison of claiming yourself versus handing the file to a claim service.
Not sure where your Air Corsica flight lands in these bands? The calculator does the distance math for you.
When Air Corsica flights are covered
Air Corsica is a European carrier, which makes the coverage question easy. Every Air Corsica flight departing from an EU, EEA or UK airport is covered — and, because the airline is EU-based, so are its flights *into* the EU from anywhere in the world.
In practice that means almost any disrupted Air Corsica itinerary touching Europe is worth checking. The exceptions are narrow: free or heavily discounted industry tickets, and disruptions genuinely caused by extraordinary circumstances.
How much is your Air Corsica flight worth?
Compensation is fixed by great-circle distance, not by what you paid for the ticket. Here is what that means on real Air Corsica routes:
| Example route | Distance | Compensation |
|---|---|---|
| Ajaccio (AJA) → Paris (ORY) | 907 km | €250 / £220 |
| Ajaccio (AJA) → Marseille (MRS) | 338 km | €250 / £220 |
| Bastia (BIA) → Paris (ORY) | 880 km | €250 / £220 |
Two refinements: intra-European flights over 3,500 km cap at €400, and on long-haul routes the airline may halve the €600 to €300 when it gets you there less than 4 hours late.
Claiming from Air Corsica yourself — step by step
You do not need anyone's help to claim — the direct route is free and often works. The process with Air Corsica:
- Gather your booking reference, boarding passes, and proof of the disruption — screenshots of the airline app, the cancellation email, or a flight-tracker page showing the actual arrival time.
- Submit the claim through Air Corsica's customer relations contact form on its website, citing Regulation (EC) 261/2004 and stating your arrival delay and the compensation amount you are owed.
- Name every passenger on the booking — each paid seat qualifies separately, including children.
- Give the airline a clear deadline (four to six weeks is reasonable) and decline any voucher unless it is worth more to you than cash; you are entitled to a bank transfer.
- If the claim is rejected or ignored, escalate to the national enforcement body or an ADR scheme — or hand it to a no-win-no-fee service at that point, having lost nothing.
The statute of limitations for a claim against Air Corsica is typically five years, so even older flights may still be claimable.
Claim service or DIY?
Be clear-eyed about the trade: a no-win-no-fee service keeps roughly 25–35% of whatever it recovers. That is real money — but so is the time and stubbornness it takes when an airline rejects a valid claim, and the service carries the court risk, not you.
Our suggestion: try the free direct route first if your case looks clear-cut. Use a claim service if you have already been rejected, if the cause of the disruption is disputed, or if you simply don't want to deal with it.
Claim services typically keep 25–35% of your payout as commission. Claiming directly with the airline yourself is free.
Air Corsica compensation FAQ
- How much compensation does Air Corsica have to pay?
- Fixed amounts by distance: €250 (under 1,500 km), €400 (1,500–3,500 km, and longer intra-European routes), €600 (over 3,500 km), with UK equivalents of £220/£350/£520. On Air Corsica's typical routes that works out to €250 per passenger, independent of the fare you paid.
- Does EU261 apply to Air Corsica flights?
- Yes, broadly: Air Corsica is an EU/EEA carrier, so EU261 covers all its departures from Europe and all its arrivals into the EU from anywhere in the world. UK departures are covered by the UK equivalent.
- Is it too late to claim from Air Corsica?
- The deadline depends on the country whose courts would hear the case — often where the airline is based or where you flew from. For Air Corsica (France) that is typically five years. Treat these as indicative and check before filing an old claim.
- What if my Air Corsica flight was disrupted by a strike?
- It depends whose strike. Air-traffic-control or airport staff strikes usually count as extraordinary circumstances and kill the claim. A strike by Air Corsica's own staff does not — the EU Court of Justice ruled in 2021 (C-28/20) that airlines must pay compensation for their own crews' strikes, though many still reject these claims at first.
- Air Corsica offered me a voucher — should I take it?
- Only if you genuinely prefer it. You are entitled to compensation in money, and refunds for cancelled flights must be paid in cash within 7 days unless you agree otherwise in writing. A voucher offer does not extinguish your compensation claim either — you can take the refund and still claim the fixed amount.
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Free eligibility check · service fee 25–35% only if you win · claiming directly yourself is free