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Dec 18, 2025

150-plus flight cancellations trigger nationwide travel chaos across China

150-plus flight cancellations trigger nationwide travel chaos across China
China’s air-transport network suffered a major disruption on 17 December as more than 150 departures were cancelled and scores of others delayed at key hubs including Beijing Capital, Shanghai Hongqiao, Guangzhou Baiyun and Chengdu Shuangliu. Data compiled by industry portal Travel & Tour World show 153 cancellations during the morning-to-afternoon operating window and several hundred knock-on delays.

Air China, China Eastern and China Southern bore the brunt, with regional carriers such as XiamenAir and Spring Airlines also trimming frequencies. Routes to international points—including Osaka, Seattle and Singapore—were affected, forcing business travellers to re-route through Hong Kong or Seoul. Airline insiders cited a mix of winter weather systems moving eastwards from Xinjiang, crew-duty time limits after earlier delays, and continued ATC flow-control measures around military airspace drills.

For passengers forced to reroute at short notice, having the correct transit or entry documentation is just as important as securing a new seat. VisaHQ’s online portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/) can instantly show whether you need, for example, a South Korea K-ETA, a Hong Kong transit permit or an emergency multi-entry Chinese visa, and their team can arrange expedited processing so paperwork doesn’t become another source of delay.

150-plus flight cancellations trigger nationwide travel chaos across China


Corporate mobility managers reported immediate cost implications: last-minute hotel vouchers, overtime for ground staff and compensation claims under China’s Flight Delay Regulations. Pharmaceutical and electronics firms moving engineers between plants in the Yangtze River Delta were especially hit, with some rerouting passengers onto high-speed rail to avoid overnight lay-overs.

While China’s on-time performance has improved since reopening, analysts warn that capacity has outpaced runway and ATC upgrades at several tier-one airports. The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) has announced a post-event investigation and reiterated plans to accelerate slot-coordination reforms in 2026.

Travellers over the next 48 hours should monitor flight-status apps closely and build extra buffer time into connections—especially at Beijing Capital, which recorded the highest cancellation ratio (about 10 % of scheduled departures) during the disruption window.
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