AirHelp

AirHelp
Industry Airline, Legal
Founded January 2013
Founder Henrik Zillmer, Nicolas Michaelsen, Greg Roodt
Headquarters London, Hong Kong, New York City, Gdansk
Area served
EU, US
Number of employees
200
Website airhelp.com
AirHelp App
Original author(s) Greg Roodt
Initial release January 2013
Written in Python, Java
Operating system Android, iOS
Available in 14 languages
Type Legal, Flight cancellation and delay, App

AirHelp is a "justice as a service"[1] company that provides an online legal service to help air passengers get compensation from airlines when their flight has been cancelled, delayed or overbooked. Air passengers are entitled to a payment ranging from €250 to €600 in compensation when their flight is delayed or cancelled, depending on the length of the delay and the distance travelled on the route.[2]

Under EU Regulation 261/2004, if a traveller is leaving from an EU country or arriving to an EU country with an EU registered airline, they could be entitled to compensation if they experience delays of more than three hours. These rules also apply to people from outside of the EU and they can be claimed as far back as five years. Using the example of the UK's Manchester Airport alone, it has been shown that compensation totalling tens of millions of pounds remains unclaimed.[3]

On the AirHelp website, smartphone app or Facebook page, air passengers can check if they are eligible for compensation. They can then request that AirHelp handles their claim on what the company describes as a ‘No Win, No Fee’ basis. AirHelp has a two step compensation system, if the said claim is successful, AirHelp keeps a 25% contingent fee from the final compensation payout

AirHelp says it aims to simplify the claims process by using its own ‘automatic flight compensation technology’ that relies on vast quantities of airport, weather and airline data, thereby consolidating a pool of legal content from a multitude of sources. In doing so, the company hopes to empower travellers to make full use of their consumer rights, and in turn raise the level of customer care provided by the airlines.

The service has launched in the United States, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, UK/Ireland, France/Belgium, Holland, Germany/Switzerland/Austria, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Greece, and claims to have helped more than 550.000 passengers in 35 countries.

History

AirHelp was founded in January 2013 by present CEO Henrik Zillmer and Nicolas Michaelsen, who serves as CMO and ex-Moshi Monsters' Greg Roodt (CTO). The founders were later joined by Poul Oddershede (CFO) [4] and early Skype investor and serial entrepreneur Morten Lund[5]

The company was revealed by TechCrunch as a recruit to the Winter 2014 class of world-renowned Silicon Valley incubator YCombinator.[6]

In early March 2014, AirHelp launched its service in the United States.[7] In early May, at the annual Tech Crunch-hosted Disrupt NY event, it announced Gmail integration. This means customers are now able to connect via their Gmail account, and AirHelp can search for past flight itineraries, to figure out how much the client is eligible to claim.[8]

In May 2014, AirHelp was announced as the winner of the 2014 Spark 'powered by Rackspace' award at the inaugural Collision Conference in Las Vegas. The company beat over 30 technology startups selected from a total of 500 applicants. AirHelp won a cash prize of $10,000 plus a fund of services.[9]

Also in May 2014, AirHelp was named best Danish startup of the year in the Nordic Startup Awards.

In October 2015, the company released their own airline ranking system, called the AirHelp Score. The score ranks airlines based on "how well they handle compensation claims for flight delays."[10][11]

See also

Flight cancellation and delay

References

  1. Shontell, Alyson. "There Are A Bunch Of Startups That Find You Money You Didn't Know You Were Owed", "Business Insider", 25 July 2014
  2. Europa (European Union website). Passenger rights. Brussels. Retrieved 18 January 2014
  3. Cox, Charlotte. "Manchester Airport passengers could have claimed £63m over delayed flights, but only applied for £1m", Manchester Evening News, Manchester, 4 January 2014
  4. O'Hear, Steve. "AirHelp Wants To Put The Fear Into European Airlines With Its Flight Compensation App", Tech Crunch, London, 28 October 2013.
  5. Day, Peter (producer). "Entrepreneuring through boom and bust", Global Business, BBC World Service, London, 17 August 2010.
  6. Kumparak, Greg. "When Airlines Screw Up Your Flight, AirHelp Gets You Paid", Tech Crunch, San Francisco, 5 March 2014.
  7. Swan, Rachel. "AirHelp: Silicon Valley StartUp Helps Passenger Recoup Cash for Canceled Flights (Update)", San Francisco Weekly, San Francisco, 6 March 2014.
  8. Dillet, Romain. "AirHelp Lets You Claim Money For Messed Up Flights", Tech Crunch, San Francisco, 6 May 2014.
  9. Jensen, Jackie. "Inaugural Spark powered by Rackspace winner announced", Vegas Tech, Las Vegas, 14 May 2014.
  10. Morris. Hugh "Revealed: the worst airlines for handling flight delay compensation", Telegraph Travel, 21 October 2015
  11. Rizzo, Cailey. "How airlines rank when it comes to making up for bad service", Mashable, 20 October 2015.
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