Published on January 15, 2026

Image generated with Ai
Hundreds of passengers were abandoned in Brazil today as LATAM Brasil (32 cancellations, 149 delays), followed by GOL Linhas Aéreas Inteligentes (102 delays), Azul Brazilian Airlines (30 delays) and more recorded 301 flight delays and 34 cancellations. Other impacted carriers included LATAM Peru (3 delays), Air France (2 delays), American Airlines (1 delay). On the airport side, São Paulo–Guarulhos International Airport (8 cancellations, 148 delays) and São Paulo–Congonhas Airport (12 cancellations, 86 delays) accounted for the bulk of the disruption, while Brasília (6 cancellations, 25 delays), Curitiba (4 cancellations, 21 delays), and Recife (4 cancellations, 21 delays) also faced sustained operational pressure.
LATAM Brasil emerged as the most disrupted carrier by volume, reflecting its dominant domestic footprint, while Guarulhos stood out as the single most affected airport, handling nearly half of all recorded delays.
Guarulhos was the worst-affected airport, logging 148 delays and 8 cancellations, making it the primary bottleneck for both domestic and limited international services.
Congonhas followed with 86 delays and 12 cancellations, reflecting intense domestic traffic pressure at one of Brazil’s busiest short-haul hubs.
Brasília recorded 25 delays and 6 cancellations, indicating moderate but persistent disruption at the country’s central connecting airport.
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Curitiba saw 21 delays and 4 cancellations, contributing to slower regional connectivity in southern Brazil.
Recife also reported 21 delays and 4 cancellations, impacting northeastern travel flows and airline scheduling efficiency.
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LATAM Brasil was the most affected airline overall, accounting for 32 cancellations and 149 delays across all monitored airports. Disruptions were widespread, with heavy concentration at São Paulo’s two primary airports, underscoring network-wide strain.
GOL recorded high delay volumes without widespread cancellations, particularly at Guarulhos, Congonhas, and Brasília, reflecting operational congestion rather than large-scale flight suspensions.
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Azul experienced consistent delays across multiple airports, including São Paulo, Curitiba, and Recife, while largely avoiding cancellations, suggesting rolling schedule impacts.
LATAM Peru operated a limited number of flights but posted a high delay ratio, mainly at Guarulhos, affecting its reduced international schedule.
Air France reported delays without cancellations, with disruption centered at Guarulhos, highlighting sensitivity in long-haul international operations during congestion.
Flight disruptions often lead to increased operating costs, including crew reassignment, aircraft repositioning, and passenger support expenses. Persistent delays may also influence revenue performance and future booking behavior, particularly for airlines with dense domestic schedules.
Cancellations and delays were concentrated among LATAM Brasil, GOL Linhas Aéreas Inteligentes, Azul Brazilian Airlines, LATAM Peru, Air France, and American Airlines, with the heaviest airport impact recorded at São Paulo–Guarulhos, São Paulo–Congonhas, Brasília, Curitiba, and Recife. Disruptions repeatedly affected Brazil’s domestic network, while limited international exposure extended to routes linked with the United States and France, reinforcing how congestion at major hubs can ripple across national and international operations.
Image Source: AI
Source: Different airports and FlightAware
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Saturday, March 14, 2026
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Saturday, March 14, 2026