- Flight Disruptions
- Nearly 400 delays hit Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio airports
Nearly 400 delays hit Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio airports
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Checked by Alice Mariscotti-Wyatt
Last updated on 2 April 2026
395
Affected flights
3
Affected airports
395
Affected flights
3
Affected airports
Disruption overview
Passengers moving through Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, George Bush Intercontinental Airport, and San Antonio International Airport are facing ongoing disruption after storms, congested airspace, and schedule pressure pushed delays to around 395 this week.
Dallas-Fort Worth alone logged well over 250 delayed arrivals and departures, while Houston and San Antonio also felt the knock-on effect as aircraft and crews fell out of sync. Because the main cause is weather and related air traffic restrictions outside airline control, compensation is unlikely in most cases. Even so, airlines should still provide care and assistance during long delays, and it's worth checking your flight status often if you're traveling in the coming days.
Disruption details
Passengers traveling through Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, George Bush Intercontinental Airport, and San Antonio International Airport are facing ongoing disruption after about 395 delayed arrivals and departures were recorded across the three airports this week. For passengers, this has meant longer waits, tighter connections, and more uncertainty just as the spring travel rush begins.
The heaviest pressure has been at Dallas-Fort Worth, which accounted for well over 250 delays in one operational snapshot, along with a small number of same-day cancellations. Houston saw dozens more delays, and San Antonio reported a smaller but still significant share as disruption at the bigger hubs spilled into the wider route network.
The current picture across the network looks like this:
Around 395 delayed arrivals and departures were recorded across Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio.
Dallas-Fort Worth handled the biggest share, with well over 250 delays and a few cancellations.
San Antonio avoided the worst weather, but still saw schedules tighten as aircraft and crews arrived late from Dallas and Houston.
This isn't being driven by one single failure. Instead, several pressures are hitting at once. Residual thunderstorms and unsettled weather across North and Central Texas have forced wider spacing between arriving aircraft, brief pauses on the ground, and slower departure rates.
Congested airspace over the busy Dallas-Houston corridor has added to the strain, along with knock-on effects from earlier storms elsewhere in the central United States. When planes wait longer for a gate or sit longer before takeoff, those minutes quickly build into bigger schedule problems across the day.
In Houston, the schedule has also been more fragile because recent federal security-screening staffing shortages were only partly resolved in late March. With passenger numbers climbing toward expected April peaks, there's been less room in the system to absorb fresh delays.
Dallas-Fort Worth is especially vulnerable to this kind of buildup because it already runs close to capacity on many days. Even a modest weather slowdown can ripple far beyond North Texas. Missed inbound connections in Dallas have already led to rebookings and overnight stays for passengers heading to Europe, Latin America, and both US coasts.
Houston is seeing a similar pattern. A late-arriving aircraft from the East Coast can push crews past the hours they can work, which then sends later departures deeper into the evening. San Antonio escaped the heaviest storms, but many of its aircraft and crews rotate through Dallas and Houston first, so upstream delays are still squeezing turnaround times and tightening onward connections there.
Airlines and airport operators are urging passengers to check flight status regularly, arrive early, and use flexible rebooking waivers whenever severe weather is forecast. With more storm cells expected in the coming days, pockets of disruption could continue even if daily totals stay below this week's nearly-400-delay mark. This remains an active operational problem rather than a resolved event.
Even if your route would normally be covered by passenger rights laws like Europe's EC 261, compensation is still unlikely here because the main cause was weather and related air traffic restrictions outside the airline's control. If your journey is heavily delayed or canceled, though, your airline should still help with rebooking or a refund, and provide care such as food, refreshments, and overnight accommodation when needed.
Although compensation is unlikely here, that doesn't mean you're without support. If you'd like to better understand your rights or check whether compensation could still apply to your specific route, AirHelp is a simple place to start.
Know your rights
When your flight's disrupted, you have rights. Most passenger protection laws cover the following
Rerouting or refund If your flight is canceled, your airline must provide an alternative. Some laws say you can choose a full refund instead.
Food and essential care
Providing food and drinks is a basic right under many regulations. Typically after a delay of a few hours.
Accommodation
Some passenger rights say the airline must provide accommodation when your journey is delayed overnight.
Compensation
Good passenger rights ensure passengers get fairly compensated for delays and cancellations. Try our compensation check and find out how much money we can get you.
This advice is provided to help you if your flight is delayed or canceled. However, the exact care and compensation you are entitled to will depend on your specific circumstances and flight. Always follow the directions of your airline, particularly with regard to times you must present yourself for check-in and boarding.
Quick facts
Summary
Disruption
Delays and Cancellations
Cause
Weather issue
Status
Current disruption
Compensation
Not eligible for compensation
Flights affected
395
Airports affected
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, Houston George Bush Intercontinental Airport, San Antonio International Airport
Cities affected
Dallas, Houston, San Antonio
Countries affected
United States
Checked by
Alice Mariscotti-Wyatt
Date updated
2 April 2026
What to do if your flight is delayed, canceled, or overbooked
If you're traveling to, from, or within the European Union, here's what you should do when you experience a disruption.
Gather evidence that your flight was delayed, canceled, or overbooked.
Get the airline to provide written confirmation of the disruption and the reason behind it.
Request an alternative flight to your destination — or a refund if you no longer wish to travel.
Make a note of the arrival time at your final destination.
Ask the airline to provide vouchers for meals and refreshments.
Avoid signing documents or accepting offers that may waive your passenger rights.
If an overnight stay is required, ask the airline to provide accommodation.
Save receipts for any additional expenses caused by the disruption.


