A Eurowings plane at Manchester Airport was grounded just moments before takeoff by bailiffs after the budget airline running the flight had not fulfilled a £5,000 compensation payment owed to four passengers.
The dramatic scene unfolded when debt collectors intercepted the Düsseldorf-bound flight as it prepared for take-off, informing the captain that the plane had been “seized” and could not leave the tarmac.
Holidaymakers aboard the Eurowings service found themselves unexpectedly stranded on the runway while enforcement agents dealt with the outstanding debt.
The sum related to a previous flight cancellation that had left four travellers without their scheduled connection, sparking a legal battle the airline had attempted to ignore.
Ari Frieder, Director of Claim’N Win, the compensation claims firm that pursued the case, said debt collectors had “seized the documents of the aircraft and told the pilot that it is now listed as property of the enforcement agents, they could not leave and could not operate the flight”.
Following numerous telephone calls over the next hour, Eurowings eventually settled the full outstanding amount.
This includes additional bailiff fees incurred by the brief seizure.
Following the debt clearance, the aircraft was released and permitted to continue its journey.
A plan was grounded at Manchester Airport just before takeoff by bailiffs over unpaid compensation payment owed to four passengers
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The dispute originated when four travellers travelling from Tel Aviv to Manchester had their connecting flight from Düsseldorf cancelled by the airline.
After Eurowings failed to respond to the passengers’ direct compensation requests, Claim’N Win stepped in to pursue the matter through the courts, per The Sun.
A judge ruled that the carrier must pay £520 to each affected passenger, with additional expenses and interest, bringing the total to approximately £5,000.
Despite this court order, Eurowings disregarded the judgment entirely, prompting the claims company to escalate enforcement action that ultimately resulted in Wednesday’s tarmac standoff.
GB News has approached Eurowings for comment.
Debt collectors had told the Eurowings pilot that the plane was now ‘listed as property of the enforcement agents’ and could not leave
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Manchester Airport was also the scene of another dramatic seizure last year, after an incredible haul of £ 1.8million worth of gold was seized at the travel hub.
Last month, Greater Manchester Police was allowed to keep the full value of the find.
The gold was acquired after the force stopped a man carrying five gold bars in his hand luggage as he prepared to fly abroad in May 2025.
Officers believed the collection of bars, amounting to 15kg of the precious metal, could be linked to suspected criminality.
Police have been permitted to keep £1.8million worth of gold they seized at Manchester Airport | GREATER MANCHESTER POLICEFollowing a months-long investigation by officers in the Economic and Cyber Crime Unit, the force presented its case to Manchester Magistrates Court.
A forfeiture order for the value of the gold bars under the Proceeds of Crime Act was granted at the hearing.
Totalling £1.81million, therefore became the largest cash injection ever awarded to GMP.
The force said 50 per cent of the funds would be reinvested into communities across Greater Manchester via the Asset Recovery Incentivisation Scheme (ARIS).














