
Data from passenger-rights platform AirHelp show that on 5 March more than 1,000 flights across Europe were either cancelled or delayed, with London Heathrow alone recording 43 cancellations and 113 delays. Gatwick, London City and Manchester were also heavily affected.(airhelp.co.uk)
The knock-on effect came from a mixture of adverse weather over the North Sea, ground-handling staff shortages in Germany and ATC slot restrictions in France. Carriers hardest hit included easyJet, British Airways, Emirates and Etihad.
If the disruption leaves travellers bumping up against visa validity or needing last-minute immigration paperwork, VisaHQ can step in quickly. Through its UK portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/) the service compares entry rules, processes extensions and submits digital applications, reducing the stress and downtime created by unexpected schedule changes.
Business travellers into and out of the UK reported average delays of 64 minutes, enough to breach many duty-hours and immigration-sponsorship reporting windows for time-sensitive assignees. Mobility managers should remind staff to keep boarding passes and ask airlines for disruption letters, which are often required when claiming EU-261 compensation or explaining visa overstays caused by missed connections.
While the event was a one-day spike, analysts warn that resource constraints could make rolling delays more common through Easter. Companies may wish to build buffer days into short-term assignment itineraries and confirm that travel-insurance wording covers missed immigration appointments.
The knock-on effect came from a mixture of adverse weather over the North Sea, ground-handling staff shortages in Germany and ATC slot restrictions in France. Carriers hardest hit included easyJet, British Airways, Emirates and Etihad.
If the disruption leaves travellers bumping up against visa validity or needing last-minute immigration paperwork, VisaHQ can step in quickly. Through its UK portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/) the service compares entry rules, processes extensions and submits digital applications, reducing the stress and downtime created by unexpected schedule changes.
Business travellers into and out of the UK reported average delays of 64 minutes, enough to breach many duty-hours and immigration-sponsorship reporting windows for time-sensitive assignees. Mobility managers should remind staff to keep boarding passes and ask airlines for disruption letters, which are often required when claiming EU-261 compensation or explaining visa overstays caused by missed connections.
While the event was a one-day spike, analysts warn that resource constraints could make rolling delays more common through Easter. Companies may wish to build buffer days into short-term assignment itineraries and confirm that travel-insurance wording covers missed immigration appointments.