TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 Travel Guide: Flying In From India (and What to Do If Your Flight Is Delayed)
TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 runs October 13 to 15 at Moscone in San Francisco, and it’s the week the global startup world descends on the Bay Area. Founders chasing funding, investors hunting the next deal, and operators from Bengaluru, Delhi, Mumbai, and Hyderabad all book the same flights to be in the room.
The catch: getting from India to San Francisco is a 16 to 26 hour journey, often with a connection, on some of the most delay-prone long-haul routes there are. This guide covers how to get there, when to arrive, and exactly what you’re owed if things go sideways on the way. For the full routes-and-rights playbook across every major US tech event, see our India to US tech-event travel guide.
TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 at a glance
| Dates | October 13 to 15, 2026 |
| Venue | Moscone Center, San Francisco |
| Recommended arrival | October 11 to 12 (a day early for jet lag) |
| Departure | October 16 |
| Passes | Attendee from $559, Founder $579, Investor $779 (register) |
Startup Battlefield, the keynotes, and the best investor meetings stack up across all three days, and the Deal Flow Cafe fills early. Landing a day before means you’re sharp for the connections that actually move your raise.
Getting to San Francisco from India
San Francisco International (SFO) is the airport you want. Here’s how the main options compare.
| Route | Airlines | Typical time |
|---|---|---|
| One stop via the Gulf (Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi), recommended | Emirates, Qatar Airways, Etihad | 20 to 24 hours |
| One stop via East Asia (Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul), recommended | ANA, Cathay Pacific, Korean Air | 22 to 26 hours |
| One stop via Europe (Frankfurt, London, Paris) | Lufthansa, British Airways, Air France | 19 to 23 hours |
| Delhi (DEL) to SFO (longer reroute, may include a fuel stop) | Air India | 18 to 22 hours |
Important update: there is no longer a reliable nonstop from India to San Francisco. Because of the ongoing Pakistan airspace closure, Air India is discontinuing its Bengaluru to SFO and Mumbai to SFO nonstops from March 1, 2026, and its remaining Delhi to SFO flights now fly longer reroutes that can include a refuelling stop (details). Air India’s long-haul network is also known for delays and disruptions, made worse by these forced reroutes. For a more reliable trip, we recommend a one-stop connection through a Gulf hub (Emirates, Qatar Airways, Etihad) or East Asia (ANA, Cathay Pacific, Korean Air) over the Delhi route, and giving every connection generous margin. A tight connection plus a delayed first leg is the most common way people miss day one.
A few booking tips
- Arrive October 11 or 12. An 18-plus hour journey plus a 12.5 hour time difference is brutal. One buffer day saves your first keynote and your sanity.
- Book the connection with margin. On a one-stop itinerary, aim for at least 3 hours between flights so a small delay does not blow your connection.
- Lock accommodation early. Mid-October is peak conference season in San Francisco, and Disrupt overlaps with other events, so rooms go fast.
The disruption reality on these routes
Long-haul flights with connections are exactly where things break. A late inbound aircraft, a missed connection in Dubai or Frankfurt, or a checked bag that does not make the transfer can turn a 17 hour trip into a 30 hour ordeal. During San Francisco’s busiest conference stretch, the odds go up, not down.
The good news is that you have real rights when it happens. The bad news is that collecting on them is slow and manual, which is the last thing you want when your calendar is packed with investor meetings.
What you’re owed if your flight or baggage is delayed
Your rights depend on where you fly and which airline you’re on, not just how long you waited.
United States (US DOT)
There is no US law requiring cash compensation for a delay. But the Department of Transportation does require airlines to give you a prompt refund if an international flight arrives 6 or more hours late and you choose not to travel. For checked baggage on a long-haul flight (over 12 hours), a bag is officially “significantly delayed” if it is not delivered within 30 hours, and you’re entitled to a refund of your bag fee. (US DOT rules)
Europe and the UK (EC 261)
If any leg of your trip departs an EU or UK airport (for example a Frankfurt to SFO or London to SFO connection), that leg is covered by EC 261. For delays of 3 hours or more at your final destination within the airline’s control, statutory compensation can reach €600, scaled by distance. This is one of the few frameworks that pays real cash for delays.
India (DGCA)
For the India-departing leg, India’s DGCA passenger charter requires airlines to provide meals, rebooking, or a refund for long delays and cancellations, and compensation for denied boarding. Amenities are well defined; cash payouts apply mainly to cancellations and denied boarding rather than pure delays.
| If this happens | What you can usually claim |
|---|---|
| International flight arrives 6h+ late (US arrival) | Refund of the ticket if you choose not to fly (US DOT) |
| Delay of 3h+ on a leg departing the EU/UK | Up to €600 cash compensation (EC 261) |
| Checked bag delayed 30h+ on a 12h+ flight | Refund of your baggage fee (US DOT) |
| Long delay or cancellation departing India | Meals, rebooking, or refund (DGCA) |
A faster way to get covered
Every framework above has the same problem: you have to chase it. Forms, boarding passes, delay certificates, and weeks of waiting, right when you’re trying to focus on Disrupt.
That’s the gap OrbitCover closes. It’s parametric travel cover that pays you automatically when your flight or baggage is delayed past the trigger. No claim to file, no receipts to upload. We detect the delay against official data and send the payout straight to your account, in your currency, in minutes. You can spend the delay in the lounge instead of on hold with an airline.
If you’re flying in for TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, that’s exactly the kind of trip parametric cover is built for: a long, connection-heavy haul where a delay is costly and chasing a claim is the last thing you have time for.
Before you fly: a quick checklist
- Arrive a day early (October 11 or 12).
- Keep at least 3 hours between connecting flights.
- Screenshot your booking and note your trigger times.
- Know your rights: US DOT for the US arrival, EC 261 for any EU/UK leg, DGCA for departing India.
- Get cover that pays automatically, so a delay does not become your problem to chase.
Sources
- TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 — dates, venue, passes
- Direct flights Delhi to San Francisco — route, airline, flight time
- US DOT: Refunds and baggage rules — delay and baggage entitlements
Stop chasing delay claims.
OrbitCover detects the delay and pays you automatically, in your currency, in minutes. Join the early access list.