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Canadian airports report 44 flight cancellations and 213 delays across five major hubs.

Major Flight Disruptions Hit Canada – 44 Cancellations, 213 Delays Across 5 Major Airports 

Canada’s skies are in chaos today, with major hubs in Calgary, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, and Vancouver collectively seeing 44 flights cancelled and 213 delayed, snarling travel across the country and affecting carriers including Air Canada, Porter Airlines, WestJet, Jazz Aviation, and Endeavor Air. The wave of disruptions, triggered by a mix of operational issues, weather‑related pushbacks, and network congestion, has left thousands of passengers stranded, rebooking, or waiting in extended security and boarding lines at the country’s busiest airports.

Where the pain is worst

Operations in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Montreal, and Ottawa are bearing the brunt, with the bulk of today’s 44 cancellations and 213 delays concentrated at these five cities’ main airports. Air Canada, as Canada’s largest carrier, is reporting the highest share of cut and pushed‑back flights, with the bulk of its disruption clustered in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver, where connecting‑passenger volumes are highest and the impact snowballs across the wider North American network. Regional operators such as Jazz Aviation and Porter Airlines, which feed smaller communities into these hubs, are also seeing knock‑on effects, with some flights scrubbed entirely and others held on the tarmac far beyond their scheduled departure times.

What travelers are facing

For passengers, the day has turned into a rolling game of status‑check‑and‑re‑book:

  • Many are dealing with multi‑hour delays and last‑minute cancellations, especially on peak business‑hour and evening‑departure slots.
  • Websites and apps for Air Canada, WestJet, and Porter show dense clusters of “delayed” and “cancelled” status tags, forcing travelers to re‑route through alternative airports or even switch to rail and long‑haul ground transport.
  • Customer‑service channels are strained, with hold‑times stretching and agents prioritizing safety‑critical and crew‑related rerouting over regular‑passenger rebooking, further inflaming frustration among leisure travelers and small‑group tour groups.

Why this is happening in 2026

The scale of today’s disruption is emblematic of broader 2026 pressures: high demand, tight‑turn‑time schedules, and ongoing crew‑and‑maintenance pinch points are making the system fragile, so even moderate weather events or technical hiccups can cascade into hundreds of delayed or cancelled flights. At the same time, record‑level tourism and business travel mean airports are operating near capacity, so any blockage in the air‑traffic‑flow or at ground‑level handling quickly ripples through the whole network, especially in Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal, which act as primary Canadian gateways.

Key Points

  • 44 flights are cancelled and 213 are delayed today across Calgary, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, and Vancouver, with the largest share of pain falling on Air Canada, Porter, WestJet, Jazz Aviation, and Endeavor Air.
  • Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver are the most affected hubs, with connecting‑passenger volumes magnifying the impact across North America.
  • The chaos reflects a 2026‑style fragile‑but‑high‑demand air‑travel environment, where operational hiccups fast translate into mass cancellations and delays, especially at congested gateways.

Bottom Line: With 44 cut flights and 213 pushed back today, Canada’s major airports are living out the downside of a record‑busy travel year—where a single day of operational stress can turn into a national‑scale schedule‑meltdown, testing the resilience of airlines, airports, and the patience of every passenger on the move.