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Spain moves to reinstate swift compensation for high-speed rail delays
Spain is preparing to restore a stricter refund policy for high-speed rail passengers, requiring the national operator Renfe to compensate travellers delayed by as little as fifteen minutes. The shift follows a vote in Congress to reinstate the earlier reimbursement model that had been replaced in 2024 after Renfe issued substantial payouts the previous year. The audience for this article includes transport analysts, policy specialists, and regular rail users who follow mobility policies and market competition in European rail.
Lawmakers approved an amendment to the Sustainable Mobility Act that obliges Renfe to return to the former criteria for Ave and long-distance delays. The measure, proposed by the opposition People’s Party and backed by a wide political spectrum, requires the company to reimburse half of the ticket price for delays of fifteen minutes and the full fare for delays reaching thirty minutes.
The decision reverses the compensation model currently favoured by Renfe, which only provides refunds for delays exceeding one hour. The Transport Ministry has expressed reservations about the amendment, with officials arguing that the restored rules are politically driven and risk creating an uneven playing field in a liberalised market.
They warn that public operators could be disadvantaged compared with private competitors such as Ouigo and Iryo, which continue to refund passengers only for delays longer than one hour. Ministry sources described the proposal as a symbolic gesture that raises expectations without addressing underlying structural challenges.
According to the draft amendment, the broader compensation scheme will apply to Ave and Avlo services, as well as Alvia, Euromed, and Intercity routes. Renfe sources quoted by the EFE news agency contend that the measure unfairly targets the public company, suggesting it favours private operators at the expense of an essential national service used by millions of passengers.
Transport Minister Oscar Puente has also noted potential difficulties in applying the amendment. He cautioned that the change could complicate Renfe’s position in a competitive market and questioned how far the new rule could be implemented in practice.
The reinstated compensation model is expected to have significant implications for the rail sector, affecting operational costs, passenger expectations, and market dynamics as high-speed rail competition intensifies across Spain.