Back
Feb 12, 2026

China’s major airports log 3,247 delays and 37 cancellations in one day, stranding business and holiday travellers

China’s major airports log 3,247 delays and 37 cancellations in one day, stranding business and holiday travellers
China’s civil-aviation network experienced one of its worst single-day punctuality crunches of the year on 11 February, with flight-tracking data showing 3,247 delays and 37 cancellations across the country’s busiest hubs. Beijing Capital and Daxing, Shanghai Pudong and Hongqiao, Xi’an, Urumqi, Haikou and Nanjing were among the hardest-hit, according to operational feeds cited by Travel & Tour World.

Although the disruption was concentrated in the morning-to-early-afternoon departure banks, knock-on effects rippled into the evening as aircraft and crews fell out of position. Shanghai Pudong alone saw more than 510 late departures, while the twin Beijing airports recorded almost 500 combined. Mid-tier gateways such as Xiamen, Changchun and Lanzhou added a further 400 delayed movements, illustrating the systemic nature of Chinese air-traffic congestion once a major node becomes saturated.

The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) requires airlines to issue delay reasons within 30 minutes and to provide meal or hotel vouchers when delays exceed four hours, but social-media posts suggested patchy compliance. Business travellers complained of missed onward connections to Singapore, Doha and Tokyo, while families heading home for Spring Festival reported hours-long waits with limited information.

China’s major airports log 3,247 delays and 37 cancellations in one day, stranding business and holiday travellers


For international passengers who suddenly need to re-route or extend their stay because of these disruptions, ensuring travel documents stay valid is just as crucial as rebooking a seat. VisaHQ’s China team (https://www.visahq.com/china/) can fast-track new visas, process urgent extensions, and provide up-to-date guidance on entry rules, giving travellers one less thing to worry about while airlines work through their backlogs.

Air-traffic managers blamed a cocktail of winter fog in north-eastern China, strong cross-winds over the Yangtze River Delta, and capacity constraints caused by military air-space reservations. Aviation analysts said the incident underscores the urgency of slot-coordination reform and the rollout of the CAAC’s new Flow Management System, which promises real-time optimisation similar to Europe’s Network Manager.

For multinational mobility managers, the episode is a reminder to build generous buffers into itineraries during peak periods—especially the Spring Festival travel surge—and to monitor CAAC and airport WeChat channels for real-time gate changes. Companies with time-critical cargo or executive movements are increasingly purchasing confirmed-delay insurance and booking “Plan B” high-speed-rail tickets on parallel city-pairs such as Beijing–Shanghai and Shanghai–Nanjing to keep projects on track.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
×