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Jan 13, 2026

Thousands Stranded in Lapland as Kittilä Airport Cancels Holiday Flights

Thousands Stranded in Lapland as Kittilä Airport Cancels Holiday Flights
Tour operators, hoteliers and local authorities in Finnish Lapland scrambled on Sunday and Monday to accommodate thousands of tourists after Kittilä Airport cancelled successive waves of departures. Located 170 km north of the Arctic Circle, the airport is the main gateway for winter-sports travellers bound for the Levi and Ylläs ski areas. Temperatures bottomed out at –37 °C on 11 January, far below the threshold at which glycol-based de-icing fluid remains effective.

According to Travel Weekly, departures to London, Bristol, Manchester, Paris and Amsterdam were among those scrubbed. Finnair admitted that “challenging winter weather conditions are slowing ground-handling operations at Ivalo, Kittilä, Rovaniemi and Oulu between 9 and 12 January”. UK tour operator Inghams diverted one charter flight to Ivalo and secured emergency hotel rooms for marooned guests, while offering free re-booking for clients unwilling to brave the freeze.

The disruption is a blow to Lapland’s peak-season economy. January normally delivers a surge of international skiers and “Santa-experience” tourists, generating up to 20 % of annual revenue for regional SMEs. With many visitors now facing unplanned extra nights, hoteliers face the delicate task of balancing goodwill with limited inventory—especially as housekeeping staff struggle to reach work on icy roads.

Thousands Stranded in Lapland as Kittilä Airport Cancels Holiday Flights


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Corporate mobility managers with employees on extended projects in northern mines and data-centre builds should verify that emergency evacuation plans are still viable; medical flights were among the services curtailed. Employers are also reminded that cold-stress regulations require outdoor work to pause when wind-chill factors sink below –27 °C, a limit breached throughout the weekend.

Although Finavia hopes to resume normal operations mid-week, analysts note that Arctic tourism may need to diversify access points. Rovaniemi’s longer runway and more robust de-icing fleet make it a logical alternate, but coach transfers add three to four hours to itineraries. Infrastructure upgrades at Kittilä—including heated de-icing facilities—are under discussion in Parliament’s transport committee and could form part of a forthcoming €200 million northern-mobility package.
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