🚨 Asia Flight Chaos — June 2, 2026: Typhoon Jangmi Triggers 3,034 Disruptions Across Japan, China & India — 586 Cancellations, 2,448 Delays — Tokyo Haneda & Narita in Storm’s Path TOMORROW — UK, Australian, NZ & Canadian Long-Haul Connections Broken — Complete Passenger Rights Guide

Published on : 02 Jun 2026

🚨 Asia Flight Chaos — June 2, 2026: Typhoon Jangmi Triggers 3,034 Disruptions Across Japan, China & India — 586 Cancellations, 2,448 Delays — Tokyo Haneda & Narita in Storm’s Path TOMORROW — UK, Australian, NZ & Canadian Long-Haul Connections Broken — Complete Passenger Rights Guide

Typhoon Jangmi is moving north through Japan. It knocked out power to 7,000 homes in Okinawa overnight. It is approaching Tokyo by tomorrow. And today it has triggered the worst single-day aviation disruption in Asia since the February 2026 Gulf conflict.

Today, June 2, 2026, severe travel distress has forcefully emerged as major transit hubs across Asia abruptly reported a terrifying surge in airport disruptions. Verified international aviation trackers confirm that a catastrophic operational breakdown has actively generated severe, cascading travel chaos across the entire Asian continent — 586 cancellations and 2,448 delays. Travel Tourister

3,034 total disruptions across Japan, China, and India in a single day. That number places today alongside May 13’s 3,390-disruption Asian worst day of 2026 as a genuinely historic aviation event — and today’s disruptions are driven by a physically moving weather system that is tracking toward the world’s busiest domestic aviation market, Japan, with Tokyo directly in its projected Wednesday path.

As of 7:45 AM Tuesday, Tropical Storm Jangmi — known in Japan as Typhoon No. 6 — was located about 90 kilometres west-northwest of the city of Amami in Kagoshima Prefecture, moving north-northeast at 25 kilometres per hour with a central pressure of 975 hectopascals. It was packing sustained winds near its centre of up to 30 metres per second and gusts up to 40 metres per second. The storm is expected to move northeast and approach the Kyushu, Shikoku, Kinki, Tokai and Kanto-Koshin regions through Wednesday. Travel Tourister

Kanto-Koshin is the region that contains Tokyo — including Narita International Airport and Haneda Airport. The storm that has already disrupted Okinawa, Kyushu, and southern Japan today is tracking directly toward the city that handles more international passenger flights than any other in Asia. For UK, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian passengers with long-haul connections through Tokyo — that warning arrives today, not tomorrow.


Published: June 2, 2026 — Tuesday
Asia total today: 3,034 — 586 cancellations + 2,448 delays
vs May 13 (previous worst): 3,390 disruptions — today second worst Asian day of 2026
Root cause: Typhoon Jangmi (Typhoon No. 6) — strengthened tropical storm approaching Japan
Storm position (7:45 AM today): 90 km west-northwest of Amami, Kagoshima — moving north-northeast 25 km/h
Storm strength: 975 hPa central pressure ¡ 30 m/s sustained winds ¡ 40 m/s gusts
Tomorrow’s path: 🔴 Kyushu ¡ Shikoku ¡ Kinki (Osaka) ¡ Tokai ¡ Kanto-Koshin (TOKYO)
Today worst hit: Japan (Okinawa ¡ Kagoshima ¡ Amami Islands ¡ Southern Japan) ¡ China ¡ India
Japan cancellations: 173 cancellations + 20 delays (JAL + Japan Air Commuter + Japan Transocean alone)
Airlines cancelling today: JAL ¡ Japan Air Commuter ¡ Japan Transocean Air ¡ HK Express ¡ China Airlines ¡ EVA Air ¡ Tigerair Taiwan ¡ ANA
HK Express confirmed cancelled flights: UO844/845/824/825 (June 1) + UO842/843 (June 2) — all Hong Kong–Okinawa
Airports hit: Naha (Okinawa) ¡ Kagoshima ¡ Amami ¡ Ishigaki ¡ Miyako ¡ Tokunoshima ¡ Yoron ¡ Okinoerabu ¡ Tokyo Haneda ¡ Osaka Itami ¡ Kansai International ¡ Fukuoka
China disruption (June 1): 166 cancellations + 2,183 delays — separate severe weather event
India disruption: Part of today’s 3,034 total
Tomorrow risk (June 3): 🔴 CRITICAL — Tokyo Narita (NRT) + Haneda (HND) directly in Typhoon Jangmi’s projected path
UK connections at risk: JAL/ANA Tokyo ¡ Cathay Pacific HKG ¡ Singapore Airlines SIN onward
Australia connections at risk: Qantas JAL codeshare ¡ ANA ¡ Singapore Airlines ¡ Cathay Pacific
NZ connections at risk: Air New Zealand JV with ANA ¡ Japan Airlines JV
Canada connections at risk: Air Canada JAL codeshare YYZ–NRT · ANA YVR–NRT
Weather-caused disruption: ❌ No EU261/UK261 cash compensation (extraordinary circumstances)
Duty of care: ✅ Applies regardless — meals, hotel, communication
Refund right: ✅ Unconditional for all cancellations


Typhoon Jangmi — What It Is and Where It’s Going

Typhoon No. 6, also known as Typhoon Jangmi, is a powerful storm system that has forced domestic carriers to cancel hundreds of flights, shut services, and issue urgent advisories for travellers and residents alike. The storm’s approach has severely disrupted travel and tourism sectors in Japan, with meteorologists warning this powerful system could affect much of western and eastern Japan in the coming days. Travel Tourister

A tropical storm of this intensity in the first week of June is early in Japan’s typhoon season — which typically runs June through October, with peak activity in August and September. Jangmi’s early arrival and track through the most populated and aviation-intensive parts of Japan makes it particularly disruptive.

Tropical Storm Jangmi is not an ordinary rainstorm. It has strengthened into a typhoon-level weather system and is steadily tracking northward through the western Pacific. Jangmi’s projected path will carry it near or across the Ryukyu Islands, potentially bringing typhoon-strength winds and heavy rain to the region. Travelon

The aviation physics of a typhoon approach: When a typhoon approaches a major Japanese airport, ATC institutes increasingly conservative separation standards. At wind speeds below 25 knots, normal operations continue. At 25–35 knots, approach separations increase and departure rates slow. Above 35 knots, certain runway configurations become unavailable. Above 50 knots, airports issue ground stops. At Okinawa/Naha, those thresholds were crossed yesterday. At Tokyo Haneda and Narita, the question is whether they will be crossed tomorrow as Jangmi tracks northeast toward Kanto.

The storm is expected to move northeast and approach the Kyushu, Shikoku, Kinki, Tokai and Kanto-Koshin regions through Wednesday. Travel Tourister

The critical timeline for Tokyo:

  • Today (Tuesday June 2): Storm over Amami/Kagoshima, southern Japan — Okinawa/Naha operations severely disrupted
  • Tonight/Wednesday morning: Storm tracks northeast toward Kyushu (Fukuoka) and Osaka
  • Wednesday June 3: Storm approaches Kanto-Koshin — TOKYO NARITA AND HANEDA AT RISK
  • Wednesday evening/Thursday: Storm passes northeast into Pacific

Passengers with Tokyo arrivals or departures on Wednesday June 3 must prepare for the possibility of airport closures or severe operational restrictions at Narita and Haneda simultaneously.


Japan — The Epicentre of Today’s Crisis

Japan Airlines (JAL), Japan Air Commuter (JAC), and Japan Transocean Air (JTA) cancelled a combined 60 flights across southern Japan due to the dangerous impacts of Typhoon Jangmi today. The widespread cancellations severely affected operations connecting Tokyo, Osaka, Fukuoka, Kagoshima, Okinawa, Amami, Ishigaki, Miyako, Tokunoshima, Yoron, Kikai, Okinoerabu, and Naha, creating major challenges for thousands of domestic and international travelers. Travel Tourister

Flights linking major hubs such as Tokyo Haneda Airport, Osaka Itami Airport, Kansai International Airport, Fukuoka Airport, and Kagoshima Airport with Okinawa and remote island destinations were among the hardest hit. The disruption is not only affecting air travel but also tourism, island connectivity, business travel, cargo movement, and local economies that depend heavily on reliable aviation access. Travel Tourister

The Remote Island Dimension

Japan’s Okinawa prefecture consists of the main Okinawa island plus 160 surrounding islands — of which approximately 47 are inhabited. For residents of Miyako, Ishigaki, Tokunoshima, Yoron, Kikai, and Okinoerabu — all explicitly listed in today’s disruption data — aviation is the primary and often only practical transport link to mainland Japan. The ferry connections that exist are unsuitable for typhoon conditions. When JAL, Japan Air Commuter, and Japan Transocean Air cancel those remote island routes, the communities do not just face disrupted travel — they face potential isolation from medical services, supply chains, and family connections.

This same pattern appeared during the May 7 Anchorage chaos article — the parallel between Japanese remote island aviation vulnerability and Alaskan remote community aviation vulnerability is exact. In both cases, cancelling one or two flights per day represents eliminating all air capacity for the day.

Tokyo Tomorrow — The Warning You Must Read Now

The Japan Meteorological Agency forecasts the storm will approach the Kanto-Koshin regions through Wednesday. Travel Tourister

Kanto-Koshin is the greater Tokyo region — encompassing Narita International Airport (NRT, the primary international gateway) and Haneda Airport (HND, domestic hub with international expansion). Together, these two airports handle approximately 180,000 passengers per day. If Typhoon Jangmi delivers significant wind or rain to the Tokyo area on Wednesday, both airports face:

  • Reduced arrival and departure rates
  • Potential runway closures
  • Potential ground stops
  • Massive disruption to the morning and afternoon banking windows

For UK, Australian, NZ and Canadian long-haul passengers connecting through Tokyo on Wednesday June 3: Check your flight status NOW — not tomorrow morning. Narita and Haneda are not remote island airports — they are among the world’s most operationally robust facilities. But no airport can operate normally in typhoon-strength conditions. If your Tokyo connection is Wednesday June 3, contact your airline today and ask for voluntary rebooking onto Thursday June 4 services.


International Airlines — Today’s Cancellations

Typhoon Jangmi flight disruptions are forcing major airlines, including China Airlines, EVA Air, Tigerair Taiwan, HK Express, and JAL, to cancel or reschedule flights to Naha Airport. Travelers from South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, the US, and China face significant travel chaos as the storm approaches. Majorca Daily Bulletin

Japan Airlines (JAL) — 60+ Cancellations (Domestic Japan + Regional)

JAL’s 60+ June 1–2 cancellations represent the carrier’s most significant single-storm disruption since the COVID-19 recovery period. JAL operates:

  • Tokyo Haneda → Naha/Okinawa (multiple daily — all suspended)
  • Tokyo Haneda → Amami, Kagoshima, Miyako, Ishigaki (all suspended)
  • International routes: Tokyo Narita → London Heathrow, Paris, Frankfurt, New York, Sydney, Melbourne

For UK and Australian passengers booked on JAL international routes through Tokyo: today’s cancellations are primarily domestic Japan routes. But if Wednesday’s typhoon approach hits Tokyo, JAL’s international services become the risk. Check ual.com or jal.com for your specific flight status.

JAL free rebooking: JAL typically offers fee-free date changes for typhoon-affected travel within a defined window. Check jal.com → Manage My Booking → Travel Advisories.

ANA (All Nippon Airways) — Disrupted

ANA’s operations mirror JAL’s with equal exposure to the Okinawa and southern Japan route network. ANA is the primary carrier on the London Heathrow–Tokyo (ANA/Lufthansa codeshare) and Sydney/Melbourne–Tokyo routes used by Australian passengers. Check ana.co.jp → Manage Reservation.

HK Express — 6 Confirmed Cancelled Flights

Hong Kong Express confirmed cancellation of flights UO844, UO845, UO824, UO825 (June 1) and UO842, UO843 (June 2) between Hong Kong and Okinawa’s Naha Airport. VisaHQ

HK Express is the budget subsidiary of Cathay Pacific. Cancellations on its Hong Kong–Okinawa routes strand passengers at both ends and break the Hong Kong connecting hub for Okinawa-bound travellers routing through HKG.

China Airlines, EVA Air, Tigerair Taiwan — Naha/Okinawa All Cancelled

China Airlines, EVA Air, and Tigerair Taiwan have all cancelled or rescheduled multiple flights to and from Naha Airport. Majorca Daily Bulletin

These Taiwanese carriers operate high-frequency Taiwan–Okinawa services carrying large volumes of Taiwanese tourists. Their cancellations strand Taiwanese visitors in Okinawa and prevent new arrivals — compounding Okinawa’s tourism economy disruption.


China — June 1 Separate Crisis: 166 Cancellations + 2,183 Delays

While today’s Jangmi disruption dominates the June 2 picture, China recorded its own major disruption yesterday June 1 from an entirely separate cause.

The June 1 disruption across China involved 166 cancellations and 2,183 delays from severe weather and airspace restrictions — a separate event from Typhoon Jangmi affecting Japan. Travel Tourister

China’s June 1 disruption reflects the continuing pattern of convective weather in the Yangtze River basin and eastern China during the pre-monsoon period — the same pattern that produced the dual Shanghai airport chaos on May 13. Both Shanghai Pudong and Shanghai Hongqiao, plus Beijing, Guangzhou, and Chengdu, have been running elevated disruption through May. June 1’s 2,349-disruption day in China carries forward into June 2 as residual positioning debt.

For Australian and NZ passengers routing through Shanghai or Beijing on their way to or from Europe: today’s Chinese disruption compounds Jangmi’s impact on the trans-Eurasian corridor.


The Australian + New Zealand Angle — Why This Matters for Trans-Tasman Travellers

The Australia and New Zealand long-haul routing question is now the most complex it has been in years. The established alternatives are:

Route 1 — via Dubai (Emirates/Qantas): Partially disrupted. UAE airspace restrictions through May 31 have eased, but Emirates’ schedule is still recovering. BA suspended Dubai to May 31. Fares elevated.

Route 2 — via Singapore (Singapore Airlines/Qantas/Jetstar): Currently the most reliable alternative. Singapore Changi is unaffected by today’s Jangmi disruption.

Route 3 — via Tokyo (JAL/ANA codeshare Qantas/Air New Zealand): 🔴 TODAY DISRUPTED — TOMORROW POTENTIALLY WORSE. JAL and ANA are cancelling domestic Japan routes and under typhoon threat at Tokyo Wednesday.

Route 4 — via Hong Kong (Cathay Pacific): HK Express cancellations at Okinawa are specific to the resort route — Cathay’s main Hong Kong hub operation is not directly in Jangmi’s path. However, Cathay uses southern Japanese airspace for its Tokyo–Hong Kong corridor, which may face routing delays.

Route 5 — via Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia Airlines/AirAsia): Unaffected by today’s Jangmi disruption. KL is southeast of the storm’s path. This is currently the most disruption-free Australia–Europe and Australia–Canada routing alternative.

The practical advice for Australian and NZ travellers with June 3 Tokyo connections: Reroute via Singapore or Kuala Lumpur today. Do not wait until Wednesday morning when the storm arrives at Tokyo to discover your options.


How to Protect Your Journey — Country-by-Country Rights

Japan — Domestic Passengers

For JAL, ANA, Japan Air Commuter, Japan Transocean, Peach, and Jetstar Japan domestic cancellations:

✅ Full refund: Available for all cancelled domestic Japan flights. Refund at the airline’s counter or online within a specified window (typically 2 years).

✅ Rebooking: On the next available service to the same destination. Given typhoon conditions, “next available” may be 24–48 hours away.

❌ No fixed cash compensation: Japan has no EU261 equivalent. No automatic payment for delayed domestic flights.

✅ Typhoon vouchers: Many Japanese airlines (JAL, ANA) issue specific typhoon disruption travel advisories allowing free date changes within a defined window. Check your airline’s current advisory.

Contact JAL: jal.com / 0570-025-031 (Japan) / 1-800-525-3663 (US/AUS) Contact ANA: ana.co.jp / 0570-029-709 (Japan)

Hong Kong — HK Express Passengers

For cancelled HK Express Hong Kong–Okinawa flights:


✅ Full refund for cancelled flights
✅ Rebooking on next available HK Express Okinawa service (when operations resume after storm)
❌ No EU261 equivalent — Hong Kong operates under its own Civil Aviation Department framework

Contact HK Express: hkexpress.com / +852 3916 3666

Taiwan — China Airlines, EVA Air, Tigerair Taiwan

For Taiwanese carrier passengers:


✅ Full refund for cancelled Naha services
✅ Rebooking on next available service
❌ No EU261 equivalent — Taiwan Civil Aeronautics Administration rules apply

UK, Australian, NZ, Canadian Passengers — International Connections

For passengers on JAL, ANA, Cathay Pacific international services whose connection is broken by Jangmi:

Weather = extraordinary circumstances. Today’s typhoon is a weather event — EU261/UK261 cash compensation does NOT apply for weather-caused delays. However:


✅ Full refund if your flight is cancelled and you choose not to travel — unconditional
✅ Rerouting to final destination at earliest opportunity — your airline must accommodate this at no extra cost
✅ Duty of care — meals, hotel, communications at the airport where you are stranded — applies regardless of weather cause
✅ Voluntary rebooking option — contact your airline TODAY and ask to move your Wednesday June 3 Tokyo connection to Thursday June 4 free of charge. Most airlines offer voluntary date changes without fee when a typhoon warning is in effect.


Practical Guide — If Your Asia Connection Is Broken

If you are in Okinawa and cannot fly out:

  • Ferry connections to Kyushu (Fukuoka) operate even in moderate typhoon conditions — check A-Line Ferry and Marix Line schedules
  • Ground transport on Okinawa main island operates — if your destination is the main island, you are not stranded
  • Contact your airline for duty of care provisions — JAL and ANA both provide hotel accommodation for typhoon-stranded passengers

If you are at Tokyo Narita or Haneda and your Wednesday flight is at risk:

  • Contact your airline today (Tuesday) for voluntary rebooking to Thursday
  • Most long-haul carriers (Qantas, Air New Zealand, British Airways, Air Canada) have partner JAL or ANA connections — ask about rerouting via Singapore Airlines to avoid Tokyo entirely
  • Shinkansen to other Japanese cities is still viable today and tomorrow before the storm arrives in Tokyo

If your UK–Tokyo flight is disrupted:

  • British Airways operates LHR–HND (London Heathrow to Tokyo Haneda) — check ba.com for Wednesday’s status
  • Japan Airlines operates NRT–LHR — check jal.com
  • Alternative: Singapore Airlines LHR–SIN–NRT (Singapore unaffected by Jangmi) — avoids the disruption entirely

If your Australia–Tokyo connection is disrupted:

  • Qantas MEL/SYD–NRT: Check qantas.com — Qantas operates Australia–Tokyo via JAL codeshare
  • Air New Zealand AKL–NRT: Check airnewzealand.com — ANZ operates direct Auckland–Tokyo Narita
  • Alternative: Fly MEL/SYD–SIN (Singapore Airlines or Qantas) then SIN–NRT once storm clears Thursday

Airline Contacts — Asia June 2

Airline Action Contact
JAL jal.com → Manage Booking 0570-025-031 (JP) · 1-800-525-3663 (US/AUS)
ANA ana.co.jp → Manage Reservation 0570-029-709 (JP)
HK Express hkexpress.com → Manage Booking +852 3916 3666
China Airlines china-airlines.com +886 2 2715 1212
EVA Air evaair.com → Manage Booking +886 2 2501 1999
Qantas (AUS–Tokyo) qantas.com → Manage Booking 13 13 13 (AUS)
Air New Zealand (AKL–NRT) airnewzealand.com → Manage 0800 737 000 (NZ)
British Airways (LHR–HND) ba.com → Manage My Booking 0800 727 800 (UK)
Air Canada (YYZ–NRT) aircanada.com → Manage 1-888-247-2262 (CA)

Japan Meteorological Agency typhoon tracker: jma.go.jp/en/typh Narita Airport live status: narita-airport.jp → Flight Info Haneda Airport live status: tokyo-haneda.com → Flight Info Hong Kong Observatory: hko.gov.hk → Tropical Cyclone Warning


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Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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