Your international DHL shipment stopped updating three days ago at a sorting hub you've never heard of, or it arrived with the box crushed and half the contents missing. Before you assume DHL will simply refund what the item was worth, it's worth understanding how their claims process actually calculates a payout — because for most shipments, it isn't based on value at all.
Who can actually file a claim: the shipper, not the recipient
Only the account holder or the party who paid for the shipping label can open a claim with DHL directly — not the recipient. If this was something you bought from an online retailer and DHL was simply the courier they chose, contact the retailer instead: under UK consumer law, the retailer remains responsible for goods until they physically reach you, regardless of which courier they used. The retailer can then pursue DHL on their own claim, separately, on their own timeline.
The part most people don't realise: DHL's liability is capped by weight, not value
This is the single most important thing to understand before relying on a DHL claim to cover what you actually paid for something. Under the Montreal Convention (the international treaty governing air cargo, which DHL's standard liability follows for most international shipments), DHL's default liability is capped at roughly 22 Special Drawing Rights (SDR) per kilogram — an IMF unit currently worth somewhere around $28-30 per kilogram, depending on exchange rates. In practice, this means a 2kg parcel that DHL loses is typically capped at somewhere around $55-60 in compensation by default, regardless of whether the actual contents were worth $500.
The only way around this cap is Shipment Insurance, which the shipper can purchase at the time of booking for an additional fee, covering the full declared value instead of the per-kilogram formula. If you're the one sending something valuable via DHL, this is worth doing upfront — it cannot be added retroactively once a shipment has gone missing.
The deadlines that actually matter
DHL enforces strict, non-negotiable notice periods, and different scenarios have different windows:
- Damage claims: under the Montreal Convention (air transport), claims must be submitted in writing within 14 days of receiving the shipment. Miss this window and the claim can be rejected outright, regardless of how clear the damage is.
- Delay claims: 21 days from the date the shipment was made available to the recipient.
- Non-delivery/loss: DHL typically requires the shipment to first be "traced" through its network before it's formally declared lost — start this process as soon as tracking stalls rather than waiting, since the formal claim clock generally starts once loss is confirmed, not from the original ship date.
Which DHL division handled your shipment matters
DHL Express, DHL Parcel, and DHL eCommerce are run as separate divisions with different claims portals, forms, and turnaround times. Check your tracking number format, shipping label, or invoice to identify which division actually moved your shipment before you start — submitting to the wrong portal just delays things further.
What you need to file a claim
- The Air Waybill / tracking number — without this, DHL cannot trace the shipment through its international manifest system
- Proof of value — a commercial invoice, customs document, or purchase receipt showing what the contents were worth
- Photos of damage, including the shipping label and outer packaging, taken before you dispose of any packaging material
How to file
- Log in to MyDHL+ (or the relevant regional portal) and go to Help > File a Claim, or use DHL's Customer Claims Portal for the UK.
- Select whether this is a delay (trace only), or a loss/damage case (trace, then formal claim once loss is confirmed or damage is visible).
- Upload your Air Waybill number, proof of value, and photos.
- Submit — standard liability cases are typically processed within around 10 working days once the claim is authorized, though this varies by division and route.
See also: Filing a UPS claim, filing a FedEx claim, and your UK legal rights when a parcel never arrives.