Published on December 2, 2025

Flight disruptions continued across major Mexican gateways today, with a combined 64 delays and 7 cancellations reported at Mexico City and Cancún airports. Airlines such as JetBlue, VivaAerobus, WestJet, Spirit, and AeroMéxico experienced notable delays, while JetBlue and VivaAerobus registered all of the day’s cancellations. The impact reached beyond international services, affecting several key Mexican domestic routes as well. Flights connecting Guadalajara, Monterrey, Tijuana, Mérida, Oaxaca, and Puebla saw schedule slowdowns alongside heavily trafficked international corridors. Routes linking to Fort Lauderdale, New York, Toronto, Chicago, Frankfurt, and other long-haul destinations also recorded significant delays. With both Mexico City and Cancún facing widespread operational pressures, passengers traveling through these hubs experienced network-wide ripple effects across multiple airlines and airports.
Mexico City recorded 2 cancellations, along with a significant spread of delays across both domestic and international destinations. The airport’s position as Mexico’s busiest hub means cancellations here often trigger onward disruptions, affecting cities like Chicago, Madrid, Los Cabos, and Bogotá. Delays in Mexico City totaled 33, reinforcing its status as one of the day’s most affected airports.
Monterrey saw 1 cancellation associated with Mexico City–linked operations. While delay levels remained low, the cancellation ratio highlights how even single-route disruptions can affect regional connections, especially on domestic networks.
Cancún’s data shows 1 cancellation linked to Fort Lauderdale. This U.S. airport also posted delays, affecting southbound Caribbean and Mexico routes. The cancellation percentage stands out due to the smaller number of total flights.
New York also registered 1 cancellation within Cancún’s dataset. With additional delays counted on Cancún–New York routes, this major U.S. hub appears prominently among the most affected airports today.
In Mexico City, VivaAerobus recorded 3 cancellations and 11 delays, making it one of the day’s most disrupted airlines. Its delay count was the highest at the airport, while its cancellations represented the entire cancellation load for Mexico City operations. VivaAerobus routes connecting cities like Puerto Vallarta, Los Cabos, Torreón, and Villahermosa experienced delays.
Advertisement
In Cancún, JetBlue emerged as the most severely affected airline of the day with 4 cancellations and 5 delays. Routes tied to Fort Lauderdale and New York were directly impacted. JetBlue’s disruption footprint was among the largest across both airports.
Today’s disruptions across Mexican airspace show clear patterns, with JetBlue and VivaAerobus standing out as the most affected airlines. These carriers appear repeatedly in cancellation statistics and top delay counts, reinforcing their prominence in the day’s operational challenges. Cities such as New York, Fort Lauderdale, Chicago, Frankfurt, and domestic hubs like Monterrey and Guadalajara appear multiple times in delay logs, highlighting their central role in the ripple effects experienced.
JetBlue’s cancellations out of Cancún significantly influenced flights bound for Fort Lauderdale and New York, making these airports some of the most disrupted today. Similarly, VivaAerobus shaped delay and cancellation patterns in Mexico City, especially on routes touching Puerto Vallarta, Los Cabos, Villahermosa, and Torreón. This dual impact from the most affected airlines—JetBlue and VivaAerobus—created a network of delays that stretched across continents.
Delays connected to major international airports like Frankfurt, Chicago O’Hare, and Madrid demonstrate how long-haul operations were equally stressed. These cities show up repeatedly in delay percentages, confirming their status as heavily affected airports. Meanwhile, closer regional connections to Guadalajara, Mexico City, and Monterrey also played a significant role in the overall disruption picture.
In summary, the operational challenges today were shaped by the heavy involvement of JetBlue and VivaAerobus, with routes touching prominent cities such as Chicago, Frankfurt, New York, Fort Lauderdale, Guadalajara, and Monterrey. Their repeated presence in both delay and cancellation logs highlights their significant contribution to the day’s disturbances, influencing travel plans across domestic and international networks.
Image Source: AI
Source: Different airports and FlightAware
Advertisement
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Monday, December 1, 2025
Monday, December 1, 2025
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Tuesday, December 2, 2025