If you thought airlines would soon have to pay you cash for delays and cancellations, think again. The Trump administration has officially scrapped Biden’s airline compensation rule, a consumer protection measure designed to hold airlines accountable when disruptions are their fault.
Biden’s Department of Transportation had drafted a rule requiring airlines to provide passengers between $200 and $775 in cash, plus meals, hotel stays, and rebooking, whenever a delay or cancellation was due to the airline itself, like mechanical failures or staffing shortages.
But this week, Trump’s DOT said no deal. The administration withdrew the plan, arguing it clashed with its deregulatory agenda. Airlines pushed back hard against the rule, claiming it would drive up costs and raise ticket prices.
For travelers, the decision means that when flights are disrupted by airline-caused issues, you may still get rebooked or refunded, but don’t expect any extra compensation for your wasted time, missed connections, or out-of-pocket expenses.
Consumer groups slammed the move, saying it leaves American passengers with fewer rights than travelers in Europe, where airlines are required to pay customers for similar disruptions. Airline industry leaders, however, are praising the rollback.
The bottom line: Biden tried to guarantee travelers a payout, Trump just shut it down.

