
Flight cancellations are surging this summer. These airports have been hit the hardest.
Nationally, the cancellation rate is up about 29% from 1.4% of flights being canceled in 2024 to 1.8% so far this summer. Historically, airlines see between 1 and 2% of flights canceled on any given day.
Using data from flight tracker FlightAware, CBS News looked at May 21, 2025 — the Wednesday before Memorial Day — through July 14, 2025, compared to the same period last year, which is shifted by one day.
While there were nearly 256,000 fewer scheduled flights, about an 18% drop compared to summer 2024, the number of canceled flights has been higher by about 1,000 flights.
So far this summer, 27.3% of flights have been delayed compared to 25.1% last year. The average delay time has crept up four minutes to 62 minutes.
The summer travel troubles vary greatly by airport with many on the East Coast experiencing worse cancellation rates than they did last year, according to data from Cirium, an aviation analytics firm, for the Wednesday before Memorial Day through July 15.
Here are the airports with the highest increases in cancellation rates so far this summer compared to the same time period last year:
DCA
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport tops the list with a 274% higher cancellation rate so far this summer. Nearly 6% of its flights have been canceled. On-time performance is down more than 10%.
The airport was the site of the deadly crash between an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter in January.
ATL
While Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport's cancellation rate this summer of nearly 1.6% is within historic norms, that is up by 257%, and its on-time arrival is down 9.3%.
IAD
Washington Dulles International Airport has seen its cancellation rate surge 104% compared to last year, while its on-time performance is off by just over 10%.
BOS
Boston Logan International Airport's cancellation rate is 68% higher this year, and on-time performance has dropped by 3.7%.
LGA
LaGuardia Airport has canceled about 5% of flights so far this summer, a 65% increase from last year. Its on-time performance rate is down 6.1%
PHL
Philadelphia International Airport's cancellation rate is up 63%, while on-time performance is down 2.2%.
These airports have decreased cancellation rates the most so far this summer compared to the same time period last year:
MIA
Miami International Airport has seen a 40% lower cancellation rate this summer with on-time performance up 7.3%.
FLL
Another Florida airport, Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, has a cancellation rate that is 25% lower than last year's. Its on-time performance rate is up 7.7%.
SFO
San Francisco International Airport's cancellation rate is down 21%, and its on-time performance is up 5.6%.
DFW
Dallas Fort Worth International Airport has seen its cancellation rate decline 17%, while on-time performance has improved 0.8%.
LAX
Los Angeles International Airport's cancellation rate has fallen 12% this year. On-time performance is up 2.9%.
ORD
Chicago O'Hare International Airport has seen its cancellation rate drop by 9%, while on-time performance has edged up 1.6%.
Looking at 2025 so far, not just from the start of the summer travel season, the total number of flights in the U.S. grew by about 3% compared to the same time period in 2024. There were 4,842,254 flights departing the U.S. for domestic and international destinations between Jan. 1, 2025, and July 15, 2025, while that period in 2024 saw 4,675,727 flights.
Cancellations are up 17% in 2025 with the overall cancellation rate increasing from 1.31% last year to 1.53% this year, according to Cirium's data. On-time departures are up slightly by 0.29%.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
4 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Russia Starts First Direct Flights From Moscow to Pyongyang
Russia's first direct flight from Moscow to Pyongyang, North Korea, took off Sunday evening, in a sign of deepening ties with the isolated Communist state. The flights, operated by Russian airline Nordwind, will operate once a month, the Interfax news service said. North Korea's Air Koryo already operates air services between Pyongyang and Russia's Pacific port city of Vladivostok.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tourist Says He Was Denied Entry To U.S. Over A Seemingly Innocent Photo — And It Could Happen To You
Seeing Vice President JD Vance as a bald, shiny orb can make you laugh ― but can it get you denied entry at a U.S. border? According to one tourist, yes. Norwegian tourist Mads Mikkelsen told Nordlys that he was denied entry at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey on June 11 after authorities searched his phone and found a Vance meme on his phone camera roll, and then proceeded to question him about right-wing extremism and drug smuggling. Mikkelsen later told Nordlys that he did tell border officials he had tried marijuana in Germany and in New Mexico, but did not think this was relevant because they are both places where it is legal. Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin refuted Mikkelsen's allegations about the meme being the reason for his heightened scrutiny. 'Claims that Mads Mikkelsen was denied entry because of a JD Vance meme are FALSE,' she wrote on X. 'Mikkelsen was refused entry into the U.S. for his admitted drug use.' But regardless of Mikkelsen's story, can a political meme on your phone be the reason you get denied entry? Following President Donald Trump's executive order for 'enhanced vetting,' border agents have been using aggressive tactics on legal immigrants and tourists. We were made for this moment. HuffPost will aggressively, fairly and honestly cover the Trump administration. But we need your help. . 'It is absolutely possible that a meme, or an article, or a photograph can be used as the basis for the denial of entry,' said Petra Molnar, lawyer and author of 'The Walls Have Eyes: Surviving Migration in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.' 'Decisions at the border are highly discretionary, made all the more so by the recent push for border enforcement to scrutinize social media for so-called risky behavior,' she continued, citing the State Department's recent plans to screen people applying for visas to the U.S. for perceived 'hostility' toward America, and to ask them to make their social media accounts 'public' for review. 'In this current climate, what may appear as a silly joke can be used as the basis for detention, interrogation, and deportation,' Molnar said. Here's what you need to know when traveling feels riskier than ever. Border agents have wide discretion. U.S. citizens have more protections than tourists and visa holders. Yes, the U.S. government asserts the right to search your electronic devices when you cross U.S. borders, but if you are a U.S. citizen, you cannot be denied entry, no matter what absurd caricatures of Vance you keep on your phone. 'You're an American citizen. They cannot say, 'Oh, you're not coming into your own country.' That's against the law,' explained Sophia Cope, a senior staff attorney at Electronic Frontier Foundation. As a U.S. citizen, you can, however, face interrogations, travel delays or device confiscations for refusing to comply to device searches. 'It might be confiscated for several weeks or months,' Cope said to consider. Meanwhile, visitors and visa-holders have fewer rights than U.S. citizens when they travel to the U.S. and 'are particularly vulnerable to being denied entry, or at the very least may face an unpleasant interrogation with the possibility of having to hand over their devices indefinitely,' Molnar said. Cope said a border agent denying a tourist over a meme is 'ridiculous,' but the Norwegian visitor had no real recourse, because he's a not a U.S. citizen. 'Unfortunately, non-green card holders, non-citizens have almost no leverage to not comply with the request to grant access to their device,' she said. It helps to know what's in your power to refuse. In order to prepare for travel, know your rights about what border agents can and cannot do. Know that they are supposed to put your phone into airplane mode before they start to search it and are not supposed to be looking at cloud-based applications, although there have been reports of people saying their social media accounts were reviewed. 'Disable biometric identification like FaceID, limit automatic cloud access, set up disappearing messages and consider switching to applications like Signal,' Molnar suggested. You can also go one step further and 'consider getting a second phone or not bringing your laptop, or removing materials which could possibly solicit further scrutiny,' she noted. Know that you are not required to share your password to unlock your phone, but visa holders and visitors could be denied entry for their refusal. When asked, neither Customs and Border Protection nor the Department of Homeland Security answered HuffPost questions about Mikkelsen's claim that a border agent told him he would be imprisoned or fined for not sharing his phone passcode. When asked, DHS only redirected HuffPost to McLaughlin's public statement about Mikkelsen being denied entry over drug use. To be clear, Cope explained, there's no legal basis for Customs and Border Protection officials threatening a traveler with jail time and fines for refusing to share a passcode for a device search. 'It's basically, either you're denied entry or your phone gets confiscated,' she said. 'There's no crime there.' There are pros and cons to refusing a device search, and your personal risk is highly contingent on your immigration status. 'People have to balance the privacy invasion of a device search with, do they risk being denied entry? Or do they risk missing a flight or being detained?' Cope said. Ultimately, if you are nervous about what could happen when you travel to the U.S., you are right to feel this way. Consider that 'It seems like this administration is being very touchy about ... people who express opposition to the Trump administration in one way or another,' Cope said. 'And [this JD Vance meme] is the most benign kind of opposition.' 'People are rightly worried about the growing surveillance apparatus in the U.S., which now includes scrutiny over memes and social media content,' Molnar said. She noted that the right to privacy is not just about avoiding scrutiny over wrongdoing but about 'our fundamental right to personal autonomy and freedom from surveillance, rights which are increasingly coming under attack.' The one thing we know for sure: because of this story, Vance memes that make the vice president look childlike or absurd are going to be seen even more, and that's one action this administration does not have the power to control. Related... Does Border Patrol Have The Right To Go Through Your Phone? Here Are The Alarming Facts. The Surprising Reason These Wild JD Vance Memes Keep Spreading Why You Can (And Should) Opt Out Of TSA Facial Recognition Right Now

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Kokua Line: Will HawaiianMiles still work for First Class upgrade?
Question : I'm confused by the Hawaiian Airlines website. Will we still be able to use HawaiianMiles to upgrade a main cabin ticket to First Class or not ? Answer : Not after September. Passengers can continue to redeem miles for First Class /Business Class upgrades on flights operated by Hawaiian Airlines through the end of September, according to the airline's website. However, using miles to upgrade cheaper tickets will not be allowed in the combined loyalty program Hawaiian will have with Alaska Airlines, which is expected to fully launch Oct. 1. 'Redemption for First Class /Business Class upgrades on Hawaiian Airlines operated flights will be unavailable after Sept. 30. However, you may still redeem miles for a First-Class ticket or pay for an upgrade, ' Tara Shimooka, a spokesperson for Hawaiian Airlines, said in an email Friday. The distinction is that you would redeem miles for the full purchase of a First Class ticket, not pay money for a cheaper ticket and then use miles for the upgrade. Q : I have a Hawaiian Airlines credit card, and earn extra HawaiianMiles by using it to shop and eat at certain places. The program is called Buy & Fly. Hawaiian's website says this program will be discontinued as of Oct. 1. What will happen to the miles I've earned through Buy & Fly ? Will they carry over like HawaiianMiles earned by going on trips ? A : Yes. All HawaiianMiles, including those earned through the Buy & Fly program, will carry over to Hawaiian Airlines' new joint loyalty program with Alaska Airlines, Shimooka said. As you said, HawaiianMiles Buy & Fly allows people with a Hawaiian Airlines World Elite Mastercard to earn Hawaiian Miles at participating businesses. The last day to earn miles through the HawaiianMiles-branded program will be Sept. 30, but many Buy & Fly partners will participate in the new combined loyalty program, the website says. 'We will have more details to share regarding partners under the new program soon, ' Shimooka said. Also, the credit card will continue as usual. 'There are no changes to the Hawaiian Airlines credit card program or your cardmember benefits, except that after Sept. 30, 2025, miles earned on the card will go to your new single loyalty account rather than to HawaiianMiles, ' the website says. Hawaiian Airlines has posted numerous updates as the HawaiianMiles brand is phased out in favor of the combined loyalty program, which will be unveiled in August. HawaiianMiles won't fully transition to the new program until the end of September. Read details at. Alaska Airlines completed its acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines in September 2024. Q : I know the lower-income property tax credit isn't automatic but I thought the city mailed the form if you got it the previous year. Do they still do that ? A : Yes, applicants who filed last year were mailed an application this year, according to Honolulu's Department of Budget and Fiscal Services. Any other eligible Oahu property owner who needs an application can pick one up at a satellite city hall, the state library and other public library branches (as available ), and the city's offices for the Treasury Division and Real Property Assessment Division. Or download the form at / 3INMleq. Applications are due by Sept. 30. To be eligible, the homeowner (s ) must have a home exemption for both the 2025 and 2026 tax years ; cannot own other property anywhere ; and the combined gross income of all the property's titleholders cannot exceed $80, 000. The value of the tax credit varies ; it equals the difference between the property's 2025 tax less 3 % of the owner's total 2024 gross income. Mahalo On Thursday at about 11 :15 a.m. as I waited in the checkout line at Waikele Lowe's garden shop, I asked the fellow in front of me at the cashier's register if I could place my items on the counter since I didn't have a cart. I had a weed killer spray bottle and two plastic plates to put under potted plants. He paid for my items separate from his purchases ! The young man behind me asked jokingly, 'Uncle, you can pay for me too ?' We three laughed. I felt grateful but a bit guilty. I thanked the fellow and left. After I put the purchases in my car, I caught up with the fellow in the parking lot. He said his name is Thomas. He declined an offer of lunch so I told him I would 'pay it forward.' Mahalo Thomas for your generosity. You are a good example of the aloha spirit.—Grateful kupuna.------------Write to Kokua Line at Honolulu Star-Advertiser, 500 Ala Moana Blvd., Suite 2-200, Honolulu, HI 96813 ; call 808-529-4773 ; or email.------------ Solve the daily Crossword