Every airport handles flight disruptions differently. Weather patterns, air traffic control capacity, ground handling, runway layout, and the national regulations covering departures all shape how delays and cancellations play out on the ground, and what passengers can do about them.
This is AirAdvisor's hub for airport-specific disruption trackers. Each linked airport page gives you a clear picture of how that airport performs today and over the past few days, weeks or even months, depending on daily passenger flow and number of flights going through.
How these pages work
A busy hub like Heathrow or Frankfurt handles thousands of movements a day, so even small knock-on delays can hit dozens of flights. A smaller airport like Pisa or Eindhoven sees far fewer movements, so disruptions tend to be more isolated, though the entries can stretch further back in time.
Each page shows only disrupted flights. If a flight is running on schedule, it won't appear. The feed refreshes every one to two hours and covers both departures and arrivals, which you can switch between using the form on each page. Everything is pulled live, not from published schedules.
What you'll find on each airport page
- An instant flight check. Search by airport, destination, airline and date
- A live rundown of recent delayed and cancelled flights at that airport (typically 100–200 entries)
- Route, airline, flight number, scheduled time and current status for every flight
- A one-click compensation check for any flight shown
Airports ≠ airlines. These pages track disruption airport by airport. If you want to see it by airline across all its routes, use our real-time flight disruptions tracker instead.
Why the airport matters when things go wrong
Compensation rules follow the airport of departure, not just the airline. A flight leaving any EU airport is covered by EU261, no matter who operates it. A flight leaving a UK airport is covered by UK261. US DOT rules apply to US departures, while APPR applies to Canada departures. Flights from Turkey must comply with SHY, and international flights must also abide by the Montreal Convention in addition to other regulations, especially for baggage and connecting flights.
The departure airport is the first thing our legal team checks when assessing a claim. That's why these pages are focused on it.
Find your airport below
Pick your airport below. If your flight appears on its disruption feed, you can check whether it qualifies for compensation under EU261, UK261. Payouts can reach £520 / €600 per passenger, and the eligibility check takes under a minute. No win, no fee.





