score:2
While the itinerary is weird to me, and El Al apparently wouldn’t suggest it if you searched for it directly on their site, when you come from Skyscanner as you did it seems to be sold as a regular connecting flight with a 2h30 layover in TLV.
As such, the flight should be covered by EC261.
It’s difficult to be certain, but I would suppose this would qualify for a cancelled flight. The EU’s Air passenger rights website says:
Cancellation occurs when:
- your original flight schedule is abandoned and you are transferred to another scheduled flight
(…)
Note that case law tells us that a series of connecting flights is considered like a single flight from origin to final destination, so while neither individual flight was cancelled or rescheduled, the fact that they wanted to change your second flight should be equivalent to a change is schedule.
In this case, you would be entitled to:
You can’t claim for the OTP-LON flight, and since you didn’t take a re-routing option which would have required it, not for the hotel either. All your costs are considered covered by the 400 € fixed amount.
Of course, there are chances they will claim extraordinary circumstances, but the case would be quite flimsy.
Still, expect them to refuse all of it or part of it for whatever reasons, and for the whole process to last a while. Stand your ground and reiterate what you are owed. In some cases it’s easier to use one of the companies which does all that for you (and have the lawyers to push it), but they’ll of course take a good chunk of it.
Good luck!
Upvote:2
To add to @jcaron's great answer, here's how I would file for EU261 compensation based on a prior experience.