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Travel Chaos Hits Germany as Over 300 Flights Delayed and Cancelled Across Frankfurt and Munich Airport, Impacting Lufthansa, United, Iberia and Others at Berlin, Düsseldorf, London, Amsterdam and More

Published on December 9, 2025

Travel Chaos Hits Germany as 300 Delayed and 5 Flights Cancelled Across Frankfurt and Munich Airport, Impacting Lufthansa, United, Iberia and Others at Berlin, Düsseldorf, London, Amsterdam and More today. Other Key airlines include City Airlines (19 delays), Lufthansa CityLine (9 delays), Air Dolomiti (20 delays combined), and Pegasus Airlines (extremely high delay percentages at both airports). Popular international connections were also hit, with cities such as London (LHR, LCY), Amsterdam (AMS), Barcelona (BCN), Dublin (DUB), Krakow (KRK), Palma de Mallorca (PMI), and Valencia (VLC) all recording notable disruption levels. Multiple carriers recorded delay rates above 50%, including Vietnam Airlines, Icelandair, Pegasus Airlines, Oman Air, Tunisair, and AJet, compounding the strain on travelers moving through Germany’s busiest hubs.

Airports In Germany Affected by Cancellations and Delays

Frankfurt International Airport (FRA)

Frankfurt experienced the heaviest disruption, reporting 195 delays and 4 cancellations. Major contributors included Lufthansa (81 delays), Condor (21 delays), Air Dolomiti (20 delays), and Discover Airlines (9 delays). International links to Barcelona, Edinburgh, Raleigh-Durham, Miami, Birmingham, and London Heathrow were also affected.

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Munich International Airport (MUC)

Munich recorded 105 delays and 1 cancellation, impacting airlines such as Lufthansa (28 delays), City Airlines (19 delays), Air Dolomiti (9 delays), and Pegasus Airlines (83% delays). Connections to London Heathrow, Amsterdam Schiphol, Dublin, Krakow, and Barcelona saw notable delays.

Berlin Brandenburg (BER)

Though Berlin handled smaller volumes related to Frankfurt and Munich disruptions, it still saw 7% delays on connected flights, particularly those operating through FRA.

Hamburg Airport (HAM)

Hamburg registered multiple delays tied to inbound and outbound Frankfurt and Munich flights, with delay rates around 20% on certain routes.

Düsseldorf International Airport (DUS)

With 25% delay rates on flights linked to Munich, Düsseldorf remained among the modestly impacted secondary hubs.

Airlines Most Affected by Cancellations

Lufthansa

Germany’s flag carrier recorded the highest volume of delays, with 81 delays at Frankfurt and 28 at Munich, reflecting its dense operational footprint across both airports.

United Airlines

United was the only U.S. carrier to record a cancellation at Munich, alongside additional delays at Frankfurt, adding strain to transatlantic schedules.

Iberia

Iberia’s Frankfurt operations showed a 100% delay rate, indicating full disruption of its scheduled movements for the day.

Tunisair

Tunisair also reported 100% delays, highlighting widespread operational challenges on its German routes.

Oman Air / AJet / Tway Air

These carriers recorded complete (100%) delay rates, demonstrating severe short-term schedule irregularities despite low flight frequencies.

How Travellers Were Impacted at Airports In Germany and Beyond

Overview of Germany Flight Cancellations

Germany’s flight disruption pattern today was driven primarily by a broad spread of delays rather than mass cancellations, with only 5 cancellations recorded across Frankfurt and Munich combined. Frankfurt Airport, one of Europe’s busiest hubs, was the focal point with 4 cancellations, while Munich Airport added 1 cancellation, belonging to United Airlines. The airlines most impacted by delays included Lufthansa, City Airlines, Lufthansa CityLine, Air Dolomiti, and Pegasus Airlines, all of which feature prominently in both Frankfurt and Munich operations.

Cities such as London, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Dublin, Krakow, Palma de Mallorca, and Valencia appeared repeatedly across the delay network, indicating extensive ripple effects across Europe. Lufthansa alone contributed more than 100 combined delays across the two airports, demonstrating its dominant influence on Germany’s overall air traffic performance. Meanwhile, carriers with high delay percentages—such as Vietnam Airlines, Icelandair, Pegasus Airlines, AJet, Tunisair, and Oman Air—amplified the disruption across long-haul and regional routes.

As congestion built at Frankfurt and Munich, onward schedules across major European cities were similarly strained, reinforcing how Germany’s hub airports shape broader continental operations. With 300 delays and 5 cancellations overall, today’s aviation landscape reminds travelers of the importance of planning for unpredictability—especially when flying through Frankfurt Airport, Munich Airport, and routes operated by major players such as Lufthansa, City Airlines, Air Dolomiti, and other carriers experiencing heightened disruption.

Image Source: AI
Source: Different airports and FlightAware

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