Retour
Oct 31, 2025

China’s Major Airlines Cancel 70+ Flights in 24-Hour Period, Stranding Thousands

China’s Major Airlines Cancel 70+ Flights in 24-Hour Period, Stranding Thousands
China’s domestic aviation network suffered an unexpected jolt on 30–31 October when China Eastern, Air China, China Southern and regional carrier China Express scrubbed more than 70 departures and arrivals at seven of the country’s busiest airports. Wuhan Tianhe, both Shanghai hubs (Hongqiao and Pudong), Guangzhou Baiyun, Hangzhou Xiaoshan, Beijing Daxing and Chengdu Shuangliu all reported clusters of cancellations, leaving passengers scrambling for re-routing, hotel vouchers and refunds.

Although the airlines cited “operational adjustments” and adverse weather along parts of the east-central flight corridor, the breadth of the disruption has triggered calls for a clearer early-warning system. Aviation data show at least 12 trunk-route flights between Shanghai and Beijing and seven inter-hub flights in southern China were wiped from schedules, a reminder that the country’s network still lacks the buffer capacity it enjoyed before the pandemic.

The timing is delicate: Guangzhou’s expanded Baiyun hub and next week’s China International Import Expo in Shanghai were expected to showcase China’s rebound in connectivity. Instead, lengthy queues formed at customer-service desks as stranded travelers struggled to navigate rebooking rules that differ by carrier and ticket class. International passengers transiting through Pudong also faced missed connections, raising compliance headaches for those on 144-hour visa-free transit schemes.

For corporate mobility managers the incident underscores the need to build itinerary flexibility back into China travel programs. Companies are being urged to monitor NOTAMs, keep backup rail options handy and remind employees to retain hard copies of boarding passes for compensation claims. Insurers, meanwhile, expect an uptick in disruption claims just as peak winter-schedule travel begins.

With China aiming to lift domestic passenger volumes to 90 % of 2019 levels this quarter, regulators may face pressure to review slot-allocation resilience and publish clearer minimum-service guarantees. Until then, travelers should brace for more short-notice adjustments during the busy Singles’ Day and Lunar New Year travel waves.
×