
Air-rights specialist AirHelp recorded 1,711 delays and 35 cancellations at major European hubs on 27 October 2025, blaming a combination of weather disruptions over the North Atlantic and ATC staffing shortages in UK and French airspace. While Frankfurt and Munich were not among the worst-hit airports, German-bound passengers bore the brunt of missed connections: over 8,200 travellers with final destination Germany experienced arrival delays of more than three hours.
Carriers most affected included KLM, Air France and easyJet, whose hub disruptions cascaded into intra-Europe feeder flights. German corporates with tight project timelines in Dublin, Paris or London reported elevated travel-management costs as overnight accommodation and re-accommodation fees mounted.
Under EU Regulation 261/2004, passengers delayed more than three hours may claim up to €600 unless extraordinary circumstances apply—a reminder for HR mobility managers to educate relocating employees on compensation rights.
AirHelp warns that the new EU Entry/Exit System adds a further variable: a missed connection can require travellers who exit the Schengen Area during re-routing to undergo biometric re-enrolment on re-entry, potentially stacking extra delays unless airlines streamline documentation.
AirHelp advises employers to factor wider buffer windows into itineraries during the upcoming winter-weather season and to use disruption-tracking APIs to trigger duty-of-care notifications automatically.
Carriers most affected included KLM, Air France and easyJet, whose hub disruptions cascaded into intra-Europe feeder flights. German corporates with tight project timelines in Dublin, Paris or London reported elevated travel-management costs as overnight accommodation and re-accommodation fees mounted.
Under EU Regulation 261/2004, passengers delayed more than three hours may claim up to €600 unless extraordinary circumstances apply—a reminder for HR mobility managers to educate relocating employees on compensation rights.
AirHelp warns that the new EU Entry/Exit System adds a further variable: a missed connection can require travellers who exit the Schengen Area during re-routing to undergo biometric re-enrolment on re-entry, potentially stacking extra delays unless airlines streamline documentation.
AirHelp advises employers to factor wider buffer windows into itineraries during the upcoming winter-weather season and to use disruption-tracking APIs to trigger duty-of-care notifications automatically.









