Published on January 25, 2026

Japan Airlines (JAL) cancelled multiple long-haul international flights connecting the United States and Japan today, as major US airports including Dallas–Fort Worth International Airport (DFW), John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK), and Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) reported elevated levels of delays and cancellations. The disruptions affected both eastbound and westbound transpacific services, grounding aircraft scheduled to operate between Tokyo Haneda, Tokyo Narita, and key U.S. gateways.
Airport-level data from DFW, JFK, and BOS shows hundreds of delays and significant cancellation volumes today, with Japan Airlines accounting for a confirmed portion of the cancelled flights at each location.
A total of five Japan Airlines international flights involving U.S. airports were cancelled, impacting services between Japan and Texas, New York, and Massachusetts.
The cancelled flights include:
These cancellations disrupted both inbound and outbound transpacific connectivity, affecting passengers traveling between Japan and the United States on some of Japan Airlines’ flagship long-haul routes.
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Dallas–Fort Worth International Airport experienced one of the most severe operational impacts among U.S. airports today.
Within this disruption, Japan Airlines recorded one cancelled flight, representing 50 percent of the airline’s scheduled activity at DFW for the day, according to the data provided.
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The cancelled Japan Airlines service corresponds with the grounding of JAL11, the Dallas–Fort Worth–to–Tokyo Haneda flight. This cancellation added to an already significant number of grounded departures and arrivals at the Texas hub, which saw cancellations far outpace delays.
John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York also faced notable disruption levels today, with delays and cancellations affecting both domestic and international operations.
Japan Airlines accounted for three cancelled flights at JFK, the highest number of JAL cancellations among the U.S. airports listed.
The impacted flights include:
These cancellations halted scheduled movements on one of the busiest transpacific corridors linking the U.S. East Coast with Japan.
Boston Logan International Airport also experienced operational strain today, with more than one hundred delays and dozens of cancellations reported.
Japan Airlines recorded one cancellation at Boston Logan, corresponding with the cancellation of JAL8, the Tokyo Narita–to–Boston flight.
While Boston’s total cancellation count was lower than that of Dallas–Fort Worth, the cancellation of the Japan Airlines service still disrupted international travel between Massachusetts and Japan.
Taken together, the data shows Japan Airlines cancellations affecting three major U.S. international gateways today:
In total, five Japan Airlines transpacific flights involving U.S. airports were cancelled, aligning with the airport-level cancellation counts provided.
These cancellations occurred alongside:
Each of the affected airports reported more than 100 delays, indicating widespread operational disruption across multiple regions of the United States.
All Japan Airlines cancellations identified in the data involve long-haul international aircraft operating between Japan and the United States, including routes to and from Tokyo Haneda, Tokyo Narita, Dallas–Fort Worth, New York JFK, and Boston Logan.
The cancellations impacted:
This resulted in disruption to scheduled international capacity on both sides of the Pacific on the same day.
While Japan Airlines accounted for a limited share of the total cancellations at each airport, the airline’s grounded flights occurred amid substantial overall disruption levels, particularly at Dallas–Fort Worth, where cancellations reached 1,468 flights.
At JFK and Boston Logan, Japan Airlines cancellations formed part of broader operational challenges that included 128 cancellations at JFK and 84 at BOS.
Today’s data shows that Japan Airlines cancelled five transpacific flights involving U.S. airports, impacting routes linking Japan with Texas, New York, and Massachusetts. These cancellations occurred as Dallas–Fort Worth, John F. Kennedy, and Boston Logan airports each recorded triple-digit delays and significant cancellation volumes.
The disruptions affected both departures and arrivals, underscoring a challenging operational day for international air travel between Japan and the United States.
Image Source: AI
Source: Different airports and FlightAware
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