Mass Flight Cancellations Continue As Snowstorms Hit Central US
By Reuters | 26 Jan, 2026
American Airlines, whose hub is in Dallas, had the biggest share of the 5,220 US flights cancelled and 6,500 delayed as of Monday evening.
A powerful winter storm that pummeled much of the United States with freezing rain and heavy snowfall forced airlines to cancel and delay thousands of flights on Monday.
Nearly 19% of scheduled flights were canceled by late afternoon, according to data from aviation analytics firm Cirium.
Separate data from FlightAware found about 5,220 U.S flights were canceled and more than 6,500 delayed by early evening. That followed 11,000 flights scrapped on Sunday - the highest daily total since the pandemic, according to Cirium.
A monster winter storm that dumped a foot of snow from New Mexico to New England paralyzed much of the eastern U.S., causing at least 18 deaths. Extreme cold was expected to persist in some places through the week.
Among carriers, American Airlines accounted for the largest share of flight disruptions on Monday, with nearly 1,180 flights canceled and about 1,130 delayed, followed by Republic Airways, JetBlue Airways and Delta Air Lines.
The Federal Aviation Administration said in an advisory that snow, freezing rain and low visibility had hit major hubs such as Boston and the New York area.
Boston Logan International Airport had the highest rate of canceled flights on Monday at 71%, Cirium said.
American said the storm disrupted five of its nine hub airports, including its largest base at Dallas–Fort Worth, where freezing temperatures and ice halted flights.
American Airlines requested ground stops from FAA for all of its flights at Dallas–Fort Worth and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to manage gate capacity constraints.
The carrier said teams were working around the clock to restore operations.
Passengers inundated carriers with queries on social media platforms as they sought to get to their destinations.
United Airlines said it would begin restoring flights, and its cancellations had dropped sharply from 1,019 on Sunday to 320 on Monday by the evening, according to FlightAware.
The storm was set to become the costliest severe weather event since the Los Angeles-area wildfires in early 2025, with preliminary damage and economic losses estimated at $105 billion to $115 billion, AccuWeather said.
Airline operations are highly interconnected, meaning cancellations can leave aircraft and crews out of position, complicating efforts to restore normal flight schedules.
About 285 scheduled flights on Tuesday have already been canceled, according to data from FlightAware.
(Reporting by Shivansh Tiwary, Nathan Gomes and Aishwarya Jain in Bengaluru, Additional reporting by Joanna Plucinska, Apratim Sarkar and Doyinsola Oladipo; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli, Alan Barona and Cynthia Osterman)
People check the flight tracker screens at the Dallas Fort Worth International Airport in Fort Worth, Texas, U.S., January 23, 2026. REUTERS/Alyssa Pointer
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