
Commuters and air passengers faced significant delays on 13 February after overnight downpours left several key approach roads to Dublin Airport under water. Met Éireann issued a Status Yellow rain warning for Dublin and Wicklow until noon, followed by a nationwide low-temperature and ice alert for the weekend. While the airport confirmed that flight operations were running on schedule, it warned motorists that “some roads leading to the area were closed or trickier than usual to navigate”.(irishnews.com)
Public transport was also hit. Dublin Bus diverted four services serving the airport, and Bus Éireann cancelled or delayed multiple inter-city coaches—including the early-morning NX, 101 and 109 services—after flooding on the R108 and other arterial routes.(buseireann.ie) Motorists experienced tailbacks on the M1, M2 and M50, and a lorry became stuck near Collinstown, prompting Gardaí to advise only essential travel.
Meanwhile, travellers caught up in weather-related disruptions often discover they need to reroute through alternative hubs—sometimes requiring unexpected transit visas. VisaHQ can streamline those last-minute paperwork headaches by providing real-time entry-requirement guidance and expedited visa or passport processing for Ireland and more than 200 other destinations. If storms force you onto a new itinerary, explore your options quickly at https://www.visahq.com/ireland/
Although the airport’s runways remained open, travel-risk managers note that a “green board” for flights can mask serious first- and last-mile issues. Many corporate travellers missed check-in cut-offs as taxis and ride-shares were forced to detour via Swords or Santry. Companies with tight connection windows or crew changes should therefore factor ground-transport resilience into duty-of-care planning—especially during Ireland’s increasingly frequent extreme-weather alerts.
Looking ahead, the DAA (Dublin Airport Authority) says it is accelerating drainage-improvement works near the old north apron and liaising with Fingal County Council on permanent flood-defence upgrades. In the interim, travel managers should monitor Met Éireann warnings, build extra buffer time into itineraries, and remind staff that flexible tickets or virtual meeting back-ups may be prudent during yellow-level events.
Public transport was also hit. Dublin Bus diverted four services serving the airport, and Bus Éireann cancelled or delayed multiple inter-city coaches—including the early-morning NX, 101 and 109 services—after flooding on the R108 and other arterial routes.(buseireann.ie) Motorists experienced tailbacks on the M1, M2 and M50, and a lorry became stuck near Collinstown, prompting Gardaí to advise only essential travel.
Meanwhile, travellers caught up in weather-related disruptions often discover they need to reroute through alternative hubs—sometimes requiring unexpected transit visas. VisaHQ can streamline those last-minute paperwork headaches by providing real-time entry-requirement guidance and expedited visa or passport processing for Ireland and more than 200 other destinations. If storms force you onto a new itinerary, explore your options quickly at https://www.visahq.com/ireland/
Although the airport’s runways remained open, travel-risk managers note that a “green board” for flights can mask serious first- and last-mile issues. Many corporate travellers missed check-in cut-offs as taxis and ride-shares were forced to detour via Swords or Santry. Companies with tight connection windows or crew changes should therefore factor ground-transport resilience into duty-of-care planning—especially during Ireland’s increasingly frequent extreme-weather alerts.
Looking ahead, the DAA (Dublin Airport Authority) says it is accelerating drainage-improvement works near the old north apron and liaising with Fingal County Council on permanent flood-defence upgrades. In the interim, travel managers should monitor Met Éireann warnings, build extra buffer time into itineraries, and remind staff that flexible tickets or virtual meeting back-ups may be prudent during yellow-level events.










