
Travellers faced extensive disruption on 7 February 2026 as a wave of delays and cancellations hit Heathrow, Gatwick, Manchester and Stansted. Data compiled by FlightAware and reported by Travel and Tour World show 250 delayed departures and eight outright cancellations spread across the four airports.
Heathrow bore the brunt, logging 98 delays and five cancellations, mainly on British Airways and Virgin Atlantic services to long-haul destinations such as New York, Toronto and Kuwait. Gatwick reported 64 delays—easyJet and BA Euroflyer were hardest hit—while Manchester saw three cancellations and 53 delays affecting carriers ranging from KLM to Jet2. Low--cost giant Ryanair experienced 26 delays, mostly at Stansted and Manchester.
Ground-handling shortages, persistent wet weather and knock-on effects from European ATC restrictions were cited by airlines as primary causes. Although the raw numbers represent only about 3 % of total daily UK traffic, the uneven distribution meant some corporate itineraries collapsed, leaving travellers scrambling for overnight accommodation or virtual alternatives.
If disrupted passengers discover that their connections now route through countries requiring additional visas, VisaHQ can accelerate the process with same-day application support and live status tracking via its UK portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/). The service integrates neatly with corporate travel tools, giving managers real-time visibility over documentation compliance when plans change at the last minute.
For mobility and travel managers the incident is a reminder to maintain real-time monitoring tools and to pre-authorise flexible booking classes where mission-critical travel is involved. Employers should also review duty-of-care protocols: staff held airside for multiple hours need clarity on expense caps and mental-health support.
While operations recovered by the early hours of 8 February, industry bodies warned that chronic staffing gaps at London hubs could trigger further episodes during the busy February half-term. Contingency planning—such as shifting meetings to regional airports or rail—may pay dividends over the next fortnight.
Heathrow bore the brunt, logging 98 delays and five cancellations, mainly on British Airways and Virgin Atlantic services to long-haul destinations such as New York, Toronto and Kuwait. Gatwick reported 64 delays—easyJet and BA Euroflyer were hardest hit—while Manchester saw three cancellations and 53 delays affecting carriers ranging from KLM to Jet2. Low--cost giant Ryanair experienced 26 delays, mostly at Stansted and Manchester.
Ground-handling shortages, persistent wet weather and knock-on effects from European ATC restrictions were cited by airlines as primary causes. Although the raw numbers represent only about 3 % of total daily UK traffic, the uneven distribution meant some corporate itineraries collapsed, leaving travellers scrambling for overnight accommodation or virtual alternatives.
If disrupted passengers discover that their connections now route through countries requiring additional visas, VisaHQ can accelerate the process with same-day application support and live status tracking via its UK portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/). The service integrates neatly with corporate travel tools, giving managers real-time visibility over documentation compliance when plans change at the last minute.
For mobility and travel managers the incident is a reminder to maintain real-time monitoring tools and to pre-authorise flexible booking classes where mission-critical travel is involved. Employers should also review duty-of-care protocols: staff held airside for multiple hours need clarity on expense caps and mental-health support.
While operations recovered by the early hours of 8 February, industry bodies warned that chronic staffing gaps at London hubs could trigger further episodes during the busy February half-term. Contingency planning—such as shifting meetings to regional airports or rail—may pay dividends over the next fortnight.






