
AirHelp’s real-time disruption tracker confirmed that 1,028 flights were delayed and 35 cancelled across Europe on 21 January 2026, with operational fallout continuing into the morning of 22 January. Although Swiss carriers were not at the epicentre, knock-on effects at Frankfurt, Paris-CDG, Milan-Malpensa and London-Heathrow stranded hundreds of passengers bound for or transiting through Zurich and Geneva.
Swiss forwarding agents report that time-critical pharma and watch-industry shipments missed overnight connections, forcing expensive road-feeder services. The disruption coincided with peak inbound traffic for the WEF, compounding congestion at Swiss airports already handling a record number of charter and state flights.
For travellers heading to or through Switzerland, making sure entry documents are in order can at least remove one variable from an otherwise unpredictable journey. VisaHQ’s Swiss portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) streamlines Schengen visa applications, offers real-time status updates and can coordinate courier pickup—freeing corporate mobility teams to focus on rebooking and EU261 claims rather than paperwork.
The root cause of the continent-wide delays remains unclear, but industry sources cite a confluence of weather diversions over Northern Europe, ATC staffing shortages and lingering software issues on Eurocontrol’s Network Manager platform. Under EU261 rules—applicable in Switzerland through the EU-Swiss Air Services Agreement—eligible passengers can claim up to €600, yet many business travellers remain unaware of the process. Mobility teams should proactively circulate claim guidelines and consider subscription services that automate compensation requests.
From a policy perspective, the incident renews pressure on Swiss authorities to accelerate contingency planning for the Entry/Exit System rollout later this year, when additional border-processing time could exacerbate similar disruptions. The event also illustrates the fragility of just-in-time logistics pipelines that depend on hub-and-spoke flight schedules.
Swiss forwarding agents report that time-critical pharma and watch-industry shipments missed overnight connections, forcing expensive road-feeder services. The disruption coincided with peak inbound traffic for the WEF, compounding congestion at Swiss airports already handling a record number of charter and state flights.
For travellers heading to or through Switzerland, making sure entry documents are in order can at least remove one variable from an otherwise unpredictable journey. VisaHQ’s Swiss portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) streamlines Schengen visa applications, offers real-time status updates and can coordinate courier pickup—freeing corporate mobility teams to focus on rebooking and EU261 claims rather than paperwork.
The root cause of the continent-wide delays remains unclear, but industry sources cite a confluence of weather diversions over Northern Europe, ATC staffing shortages and lingering software issues on Eurocontrol’s Network Manager platform. Under EU261 rules—applicable in Switzerland through the EU-Swiss Air Services Agreement—eligible passengers can claim up to €600, yet many business travellers remain unaware of the process. Mobility teams should proactively circulate claim guidelines and consider subscription services that automate compensation requests.
From a policy perspective, the incident renews pressure on Swiss authorities to accelerate contingency planning for the Entry/Exit System rollout later this year, when additional border-processing time could exacerbate similar disruptions. The event also illustrates the fragility of just-in-time logistics pipelines that depend on hub-and-spoke flight schedules.










