
Business travellers flying in and out of Poland’s busiest hub experienced significant disruption on 11 February. Real-time data from aviation tracker Flightera showed that 65 % of departures were delayed, with an average hold-up of 30 minutes, while arrivals ran 62 minutes late on average. Airport authorities blamed a combination of dense morning fog reducing runway capacity and ongoing resurfacing works on taxiway S.
Although no flights were cancelled, the ripple effect stranded hundreds of transit passengers and forced LOT Polish Airlines to waive change fees on short-haul tickets purchased before 5 February. Freight forwarders also reported missed trucking connections at the nearby air-cargo village, prompting ad-hoc warehousing costs for just-in-time supply chains.
If the schedule shuffle means you suddenly need to amend travel documents or secure a visa extension, VisaHQ can expedite the process online and advise on Schengen requirements within hours. Corporate travel managers can submit multiple applications through a single dashboard at https://www.visahq.com/poland/ reducing paperwork and keeping executives mobile even when flights go awry.
Travel-management companies recommend that executives build at least a two-hour buffer into same-day connections through Warsaw this week, as meteorologists forecast continued low visibility. Companies running assignment kick-offs or board meetings should verify whether key attendees are rerouted via Kraków or Berlin.
The episode underlines the vulnerability of Poland’s single major hub: Centralny Port Komunikacyjny (CPK), the new mega-airport planned to open in 2032, promises greater redundancy, but until then mobility planners must factor in seasonal weather-related delays at Chopin.
Although no flights were cancelled, the ripple effect stranded hundreds of transit passengers and forced LOT Polish Airlines to waive change fees on short-haul tickets purchased before 5 February. Freight forwarders also reported missed trucking connections at the nearby air-cargo village, prompting ad-hoc warehousing costs for just-in-time supply chains.
If the schedule shuffle means you suddenly need to amend travel documents or secure a visa extension, VisaHQ can expedite the process online and advise on Schengen requirements within hours. Corporate travel managers can submit multiple applications through a single dashboard at https://www.visahq.com/poland/ reducing paperwork and keeping executives mobile even when flights go awry.
Travel-management companies recommend that executives build at least a two-hour buffer into same-day connections through Warsaw this week, as meteorologists forecast continued low visibility. Companies running assignment kick-offs or board meetings should verify whether key attendees are rerouted via Kraków or Berlin.
The episode underlines the vulnerability of Poland’s single major hub: Centralny Port Komunikacyjny (CPK), the new mega-airport planned to open in 2032, promises greater redundancy, but until then mobility planners must factor in seasonal weather-related delays at Chopin.









