Canada Winter Chaos AGAIN: 400+ Flights Disrupted January 24-25, 2026

Published on : 25 Jan 2026

Canada winter crisis strikes again January 24-25: 400+ flight disruptions, -55°C cold, 20% Toronto Pearson cancellations. Air Canada/WestJet waivers active NOW.

Toronto Pearson hit hardest with 40% disruption rate (360-400 cancellations + delays) as bone-chilling -55°C wind chill paralyzes Canada from Atlantic to Prairies—Air Canada & WestJet issue free rebooking waivers while Sunday snow threatens MORE chaos

Breaking: Canada’s relentless winter nightmare strikes AGAIN with 400+ flight disruptions January 24-25 as bone-chilling Arctic cold (-55°C wind chill) paralyzes Toronto Pearson, Montreal, and major hubs nationwide. 20% of Toronto’s 900+ flights cancelled, another 20% delayed—stranding thousands in the latest assault of 2026’s brutal winter crisis. Here’s everything travelers need to know about this weekend’s chaos and why Canadian aviation can’t catch a break.


Published: January 25, 2026
Crisis Dates: Friday January 24 – Sunday January 26
Toronto Pearson Impact: 360-400 disruptions (20% cancelled, 20% delayed)
Nationwide Estimate: 400-500+ total disruptions
Airlines Affected: Air Canada, WestJet, Porter, Jazz, regional carriers
Airports Hit: Toronto, Montreal, Halifax, Moncton, Quebec City, Calgary, Vancouver
Weather Cause: Extreme cold (-30°C to -55°C wind chill), snow forecast Sunday
Winter 2026 Crisis Total: 2,200+ disruptions since January 2
Pattern: 5th major weather event in 24 days


Toronto Pearson Hammered: 40% of Flights Disrupted

Toronto Pearson International Airport—Canada’s busiest hub—is experiencing catastrophic disruptions this weekend as Arctic cold and approaching snow create a perfect storm of operational chaos.

Friday-Saturday Numbers (Per Airport Data):


✈️ 20%+ of 900+ flights CANCELLED = 180-200 cancellations
✈️ Another 20% DELAYED = 180-200 delays
✈️ Total: 360-400 disruptions at Pearson alone
✈️ 40% overall disruption rate (unprecedented for non-blizzard conditions)
✈️ Passengers affected: 50,000-60,000 travelers stranded or delayed
✈️ Sunday snow threat: 15-30cm forecast, could trigger MORE cancellations

This represents one of Toronto Pearson’s worst disruption rates of the winter—40% of all flights either cancelled or delayed, and the crisis isn’t over. Environment Canada is forecasting 15-30 centimeters of snow for Toronto and southern Ontario starting Sunday morning, virtually guaranteeing continued chaos through the weekend.

The Human Toll:

Guilherme Holtz and his family flew 11 hours from Rio de Janeiro to Toronto, expecting to catch an 8:00 AM Saturday connection to Quebec City. Cancelled. Rebooked for 6:00 PM—an additional 10-hour airport wait after an exhausting overnight flight.

“I’m hoping that it stays like that there’s no more cancellations, and we can go home,” Holtz told reporters at Pearson Saturday morning. “(I am) very tired and we just want to get home, but it’s 10 hours more to do all this whole trip. It’s very long.”

His story is playing out thousands of times across Canadian airports this weekend.

The Bone-Chilling Numbers: -30°C to -55°C Wind Chill

This isn’t your typical Canadian cold. This is life-threatening Arctic air sweeping from the Prairies to the Atlantic, bringing wind chills that can cause frostbite in minutes.

Temperature Breakdown by Region:

Ontario

  • Toronto: -30°C wind chill Saturday morning
  • Ottawa: -30°C to -40°C wind chill
  • Freezing period: Friday evening through Monday morning (60+ hours)
  • Sunday snow: 15-30cm accumulation forecast
  • Wind gusts: Up to 50 km/h, reducing visibility

Impact: Warming centers in Hamilton extended hours or opened new spaces due to overwhelming demand. Toronto Pearson activated full winter storm protocols.

Quebec

  • Montreal: -30°C wind chill, freezing rain threat
  • Quebec City: -35°C wind chill
  • Warming centers: Over 90% occupancy in Montreal

Impact: Montréal-Trudeau International Airport experiencing parallel disruptions to Toronto, with Air Canada’s two largest hubs simultaneously crippled.

Atlantic Provinces

  • Halifax: -25°C wind chill, WestJet issuing advisories
  • Moncton, NB: -28°C wind chill, cross-border flight disruptions
  • Newfoundland: Milder but still sub-zero

Impact: Regional carriers like PAL Airlines and Jazz Aviation hit hard, stranding passengers in remote locations with limited rebooking options.

Prairies (Worst Affected)

  • Calgary: -45°C wind chill Friday-Saturday
  • Saskatchewan: -45°C wind chill, dense fog
  • Manitoba (Churchill): -50°C to -55°C wind chill
  • Alberta (Edmonton area): -40°C to -45°C wind chill

Impact: WestJet operations centered in Calgary facing severe delays. Extreme cold causes mechanical issues, de-icing challenges, and crew duty time complications.

Critical Context: These temperatures are dangerous. Environment Canada warns that wind chills below -40°C can cause frostbite on exposed skin in under 5 minutes. At -55°C (Manitoba/Saskatchewan), frostbite occurs in 2-3 minutes. This forces airlines to limit ground crew exposure, slowing all operations.

Air Canada & WestJet Issue Free Rebooking Waivers

Both of Canada’s major airlines activated travel waivers Friday-Saturday as the crisis unfolded.

Air Canada Travel Advisory

Affected Airports:

  • Toronto Pearson (YYZ) – Primary hub
  • Montréal-Trudeau (YUL) – Secondary hub
  • Ottawa (YOW)
  • Halifax (YHZ)
  • Quebec City (YQB)
  • Regional Ontario/Quebec airports

Waiver Terms:

  • Tickets purchased by January 21, 2026
  • Travel dates January 24-25, 2026
  • Free rebooking with no change fees
  • No fare difference if rebooking in same cabin
  • Must rebook by January 30, 2026

Air Canada’s Statement: “Extreme cold at airports in Toronto and Montreal is causing delays. Customers can rebook at no cost.”

WestJet Travel Advisory

Affected Airports:

  • Halifax (YHZ)
  • Moncton, NB (YQM)
  • Quebec City (YQB)
  • Calgary (YYC) – WestJet’s main hub
  • Edmonton (YEG)
  • US destinations: Atlanta (ATL), Houston (IAH), New York City (JFK/EWR)

Waiver Scope:

WestJet’s advisory is notably broader than Air Canada’s, including US cross-border flights affected by Winter Storm Fern (which is simultaneously hitting the southern and eastern United States). This creates a double-disruption scenario: Canadian passengers trying to fly south are hit by BOTH Canadian cold AND US storm cancellations.

Example: Scott Lang and his wife had their Air Canada direct flight to Cancun cancelled THREE days ago, then rescheduled with a Houston layover for Saturday morning. Now the Houston connection is threatened by Winter Storm Fern’s ice and snow.

Why This Is Different: Extreme Cold vs. Snow

Most people think snow causes the worst airport disruptions. Wrong. Extreme cold is often WORSE because it’s harder to combat and lasts longer.

Cold Weather Challenges for Airlines

1. Aircraft De-Icing Becomes Critical

At -30°C, even without precipitation, frost and ice form on aircraft surfaces overnight and during ground operations. Every plane requires de-icing treatment before takeoff, creating massive bottlenecks.

Process time: 15-30 minutes per aircraft Toronto Pearson capacity: ~20-30 de-icing trucks Saturday morning backlog: 180+ flights needing treatment Math: Doesn’t work. Physically impossible to process that many planes quickly enough.

2. Mechanical Failures Skyrocket

Aircraft systems are rated for cold weather operation, but -40°C to -55°C pushes equipment to its limits:

  • Hydraulic fluid thickens, slowing control surfaces
  • Battery performance drops 30-50%
  • Tire pressure changes require pre-flight adjustments
  • APUs (auxiliary power units) struggle to start
  • Door seals become brittle and can crack

Result: Planes that were airworthy at -20°C need extensive checks at -40°C, adding delays.

3. Ground Crew Safety Limits

Canadian labor laws and airline policies restrict outdoor work in extreme cold:

  • Below -40°C: Outdoor work limited to 10-15 minute rotations
  • Ground crews must warm up indoors between shifts
  • Baggage handlers, fuelers, pushback teams all affected

Result: Operations that normally take 30 minutes now take 60-90 minutes because crews cycle in/out for safety.

4. Fuel Temperature Management

Jet fuel can gel or freeze at extreme temperatures (typically below -40°C for Jet A). Airlines must:

  • Add fuel system icing inhibitor (FSII)
  • Keep fuel temperature above -40°C through engine run-ups
  • Monitor fuel continuously during ground delays

Challenge: Planes sitting on the tarmac for hours risk fuel issues, forcing returns to gate.

5. Runway and Taxiway Ice

Even without snow, moisture in the air freezes onto pavement at -30°C, creating invisible ice. Runways require continuous:

  • Chemical treatment (limited effectiveness below -35°C)
  • Mechanical sweeping
  • Friction testing every 2 hours

Toronto’s runways: Reduced operational capacity by 30-40% due to ice/friction concerns.

Sunday Snow: The Second Blow

Just when airlines thought the worst was over, Environment Canada dropped a bomb Friday evening:

Sunday Snow Forecast for Southern Ontario:

  • Accumulation: 15-30 centimeters (6-12 inches)
  • Timing: Starting Sunday morning, continuing through day
  • Wind gusts: Up to 50 km/h
  • Visibility: Significantly reduced, near-zero in heavy bands
  • Temperature: Remaining below freezing (-10°C to -15°C)

This is a worst-case scenario. Airports are already operating at 40% disruption rates from extreme cold. Now add half a foot of snow Sunday morning—peak departure time—and you’re looking at potential 60-80% disruption rates Sunday.

Toronto Pearson’s Sunday Preparations:

The airport posted on social media Saturday: “We are closely monitoring the impact of the winter storm on our operations as we prepare to respond to snowfall starting Sunday morning.”

Translation: Expect mass cancellations Sunday. Airlines are likely pre-cancelling flights Saturday evening for Sunday morning to avoid stranding passengers overnight at the airport.

Cross-Border Chaos: US Winter Storm Fern Compounds Crisis

Canadian travelers aren’t just dealing with domestic cold—they’re also caught in Winter Storm Fern’s US rampage.

US Airports Affecting Canadian Passengers:

  • Atlanta (ATL): Major Delta/Air Canada hub, ice storm
  • Houston (IAH/HOU): United/Air Canada connections, 0.5-inch ice accumulation
  • New York City (JFK/EWR/LGA): 8-12 inches snow Sunday
  • Philadelphia (PHL): 6-10 inches snow Sunday
  • Washington DC (IAD/DCA): Ice and snow mix
  • Charlotte (CLT): 6-10 inches snow Sunday

The Double-Whammy Effect:

  1. Canadian passengers book US connections (Toronto → Houston → Cancun)
  2. Canadian cold delays Toronto departure
  3. Houston flight operates but arrives late
  4. Winter Storm Fern cancels Houston → Cancun leg
  5. Passenger stranded in Houston with no hotel (weather = airline not responsible)

This scenario is playing out HUNDREDS of times this weekend, with Canadians stuck in US airports far from home during an ice storm.

The Fifth Major Event in 24 Days: Pattern of Relentless Chaos

January 24-25’s disruptions aren’t an isolated incident. This is the FIFTH major weather event hammering Canadian aviation in 24 days:

Canada’s Winter 2026 Crisis Timeline:

Event 1: January 1-2 (New Year’s Chaos)

  • Disruptions: 147 cancellations, 618 delays = 765 total
  • Cause: Heavy snow, freezing rain
  • Worst airports: Toronto Pearson, Vancouver, Montreal

Event 2: January 5-6 (Post-Holiday Meltdown)

  • Disruptions: 102 cancellations, 1,650 delays = 1,752 total
  • Cause: Residual holiday travel + snow squalls
  • Worst airports: Toronto Pearson (630 delays, 28 cancellations)

Event 3: January 16 (Toronto Snowstorm)

  • Disruptions: 327 cancellations, 657 delays = 984 total
  • Cause: 40cm Toronto snowstorm
  • Impact: DVP highway closed, city paralyzed

Event 4: January 21 (Arctic Blast #1)

  • Disruptions: 104 cancellations, 332 delays = 436 total
  • Cause: -50°C wind chill, freezing rain, fog
  • Worst airports: Calgary, Montreal, Vancouver

Event 5: January 24-25 (Arctic Blast #2) ← WE ARE HERE

  • Disruptions: 180-200 cancellations, 180-200 delays = 360-400 total (Toronto alone)
  • Nationwide estimate: 400-500+ total
  • Cause: -55°C wind chill + Sunday snow forecast
  • Worst airports: Toronto Pearson, Montreal, Halifax, Calgary

24-Day Total: ~2,200+ disruptions (1,000+ cancellations, 1,200+ major delays)

Average: One major disruption event every 5 days since January 1.

Why Canadian Aviation Can’t Catch a Break

The pattern is clear: Canada’s aviation system is operating with ZERO operational slack, and winter weather keeps exploiting every weakness.

Systemic Problems

1. Infrastructure Deficit

Canadian airports invested heavily in terminal expansions (shiny new gates, food courts, shopping) but underfunded operational infrastructure:

  • De-icing capacity: Toronto has 20-30 trucks; Chicago O’Hare has 50+
  • Runway redundancy: One iced runway shuts 30-40% capacity; US hubs have 4-6 runways
  • Cold weather equipment: Canadian airports assumed “we’re used to cold”—but -55°C exceeds design specs

2. Airline Crew Shortages

Post-pandemic staffing hasn’t recovered. When weather strikes:

  • Pilots/flight attendants “time out” (hit duty hour limits)
  • Replacement crews don’t exist—flight cancels
  • Cascading effect: One cancelled crew affects 3-5 subsequent flights

3. Geographic Vulnerability

Unlike US hub-and-spoke systems with geographic diversity, Canada’s three main hubs (Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver) are ALL in weather-vulnerable zones:

  • Toronto/Montreal: Snowbelt, Great Lakes effect
  • Vancouver: Pacific storms, fog
  • Calgary: Chinook winds, Prairies Arctic blasts

When ONE gets hit, 33% of national capacity disappears. When TWO get hit simultaneously (like this weekend), the entire country grinds to a halt.

4. Climate Change Amplification

Polar vortex instability is pushing Arctic air further south more frequently. Canada is seeing:

  • More extreme cold events (-50°C to -55°C now “normal”)
  • Longer duration freezes (3-4 days instead of 12-24 hours)
  • Mixed precipitation (ice + snow simultaneously)
  • Rapid-fire events (5 in 24 days instead of 2-3 per winter)

The Result: What used to be “once per winter” crisis events are now happening every 5 days.

What Travelers Should Do RIGHT NOW

If You’re Flying This Weekend (January 24-26)

Saturday (TODAY):

  • Check flight status every 2 hours (airlines cancelling in waves)
  • Arrive 3+ hours early if flight still operating
  • Pack essentials in carry-on: Medications, phone chargers, snacks, extra layers
  • Download airline apps for instant rebooking
  • Have backup plan: Hotel near airport, rental car to drive home

Sunday:

  • AVOID morning flights (snow starts Sunday AM)
  • Afternoon/evening flights better but still risky
  • Consider rebooking to Monday if waiver allows
  • Monitor road conditions to airport (Highway 401, 400, 407 will be treacherous)

If Your Flight Gets Cancelled

Step 1: Rebook Immediately

  • Use airline app (faster than calling)
  • Accept first available seat (don’t wait for “perfect” option)
  • Consider alternate airports: Hamilton (YHM), Buffalo (BUF) if driving possible

Step 2: Know Your Rights

Canadian Passenger Rights (APPR):

  • Weather cancellations = NOT eligible for compensation
  • BUT airlines must rebook you on next available flight (theirs or competitor’s)
  • You can request full refund instead of rebooking

Hotels/Meals:

  • Airlines NOT required to provide (weather = extraordinary circumstance)
  • Check credit card benefits (many cover weather delays)
  • Keep all receipts if you book hotel yourself

Step 3: File Waiver Claim

If you purchased before January 21:

  • Air Canada: aircanada.com/waivers
  • WestJet: westjet.com/travel-info
  • Free change, no fare difference
  • Must complete by January 30

If You’re Planning Travel Next Week (January 27-31)

Good News: Arctic blast should weaken by Tuesday-Wednesday. Bad News: Recovery chaos lasts 2-3 days after weather clears.

Monday-Tuesday (Jan 27-28):

  • Aircraft out of position (planes stuck at wrong airports)
  • Crew shortages (pilots/FAs timed out during weekend)
  • Passenger backlog (thousands rebooking from Sat/Sun)
  • Expect 100-200 additional cancellations Mon-Tue as system recovers

Wednesday+ (Jan 29+):

  • Operations should normalize
  • Best time to fly if you can delay travel

Regional Impact: Who’s Getting Hit Hardest

Toronto Pearson (YYZ)

Saturday Disruptions: 360-400 (40% of flights) Sunday Forecast: 60-80% disruptions likely Why: Canada’s busiest airport (50+ million passengers annually), limited de-icing capacity, snow forecast Airlines Affected: Air Canada (largest hub), WestJet, Porter, all international carriers

Traveler Strategy: Avoid Pearson this weekend if possible. Rebook through Montreal, Ottawa, or even US hubs.

Montréal-Trudeau (YUL)

Saturday Disruptions: Estimated 150-200 Sunday Forecast: Freezing rain + snow mix Why: Air Canada’s second-largest hub, simultaneous hit with Toronto creates network collapse Airlines Affected: Air Canada, Porter, Air Transat, international carriers

Traveler Strategy: Similar to Toronto—avoid if possible, expect cascading delays through Tuesday.

Calgary International (YYC)

Saturday Disruptions: Estimated 80-120 Sunday Forecast: Continued extreme cold (-40°C) Why: WestJet’s main hub, Prairies Arctic blasts, mechanical issues in extreme cold Airlines Affected: WestJet, WestJet Encore, Air Canada

Traveler Strategy: Morning flights better than afternoon (temperatures warmest 12-2 PM). Dress warmly—if flight delays, you may be outside briefly during boarding.

Vancouver International (YVR)

Saturday Disruptions: Estimated 60-100 Sunday Forecast: Rain/fog (milder than east) Why: Pacific moisture creates fog, less severe than eastern Canada Airlines Affected: Air Canada, WestJet, international carriers

Traveler Strategy: Vancouver is your BEST BET for Canadian travel this weekend (relatively speaking). Still expect delays, but cancellations less likely.

Halifax, Moncton, Ottawa, Quebec City

Saturday Disruptions: 30-50 each Sunday Forecast: Continued cold, residual snow Why: Smaller airports with regional carrier dependence (Jazz, PAL Airlines) Impact: Limited rebooking options—if your flight cancels, next seat might be Tuesday-Wednesday

Traveler Strategy: Regional airports always struggle more in weather. Budget extra time, have contingency plans.

The Cost of Canada’s Winter Crisis

Financial Impact

Airlines:

  • Lost revenue: $50-75 million (estimated) from 2,200+ disruptions
  • Operational costs: De-icing chemicals, crew overtime, hotel vouchers
  • Rebooking costs: Staff overtime, IT system load

Airports:

  • Snow removal: $2-4 million per major event (Toronto alone)
  • Overtime: Security, ground crews, maintenance
  • Lost concessions: When passengers don’t fly, shops/restaurants lose sales

Passengers:

  • Missed events: Weddings, funerals, business meetings
  • Hotel costs: $150-300/night × thousands of passengers
  • Lost wages: Missing work days
  • Vacation ruined: Families losing prepaid Caribbean/Mexico trips

Total Estimated Cost (24 days): $300-500 million across all stakeholders

Human Impact

  • 80,000-100,000 passengers directly affected by cancellations
  • 200,000+ passengers affected by significant delays (3+ hours)
  • Thousands separated from luggage for days
  • Families stranded across country during emergencies

Example: Elderly passenger needs urgent medical care in Vancouver, flying from Halifax. Flight cancels Saturday, next available seat Wednesday. Family scrambles to arrange local care.

What Needs to Change: Expert Recommendations

Infrastructure Investments Required

1. Double De-Icing Capacity

  • Cost: $100-200 million (Toronto, Montreal, Calgary combined)
  • What: 40-50 additional de-icing trucks, dedicated pads
  • Timeline: 2-3 years to implement
  • Impact: Cut de-icing bottleneck delays 50%

2. Runway Heating Systems

  • Cost: $500 million – $1 billion (major hubs)
  • What: Embed heating elements in critical runway/taxiway sections
  • Example: Oslo Airport uses this—maintains operations in -40°C
  • Impact: Eliminate ice-related runway closures

3. Cold Weather Hangars

  • Cost: $200-400 million (per major hub)
  • What: Heated aircraft parking for overnight/maintenance
  • Impact: Reduce morning frost delays, protect equipment

Operational Changes

1. Proactive Cancellations

  • Airlines should cancel flights 24-48 hours ahead when -40°C+ forecast
  • Gives passengers time to rebook, arrange alternatives
  • Reduces airport chaos, stranded passengers

2. Weather Reserve Crews

  • Maintain 10-15% surplus crew during winter months
  • Expensive but prevents cascading cancellations
  • Air Canada/WestJet currently operate at 98-100% crew utilization

3. Passenger Communication

  • Real-time push notifications for ALL flight changes
  • Proactive rebooking offers BEFORE cancellations
  • Clear waiver/refund policies published 48 hours ahead

Policy/Regulatory

1. Mandatory Weather Preparedness Standards

  • Transport Canada should require minimum de-icing capacity
  • Based on airport size, climate zone
  • Toronto/Montreal/Calgary must meet “Tier 1 Winter Hub” standards

2. Extended APPR Coverage

  • Canadian Passenger Rights currently exempt weather
  • Consider partial compensation for repeated systemic failures
  • Example: If airline has 40% disruption rate 3+ days, passengers get vouchers

3. Hub Diversification Incentives

  • Tax breaks for airlines developing secondary hubs (Ottawa, Winnipeg, Edmonton)
  • Reduces overreliance on Toronto/Montreal
  • Geographic risk distribution

The Bottom Line

Canada’s winter aviation crisis isn’t getting better—it’s getting WORSE. Five major disruption events in 24 days. Over 2,200 flights cancelled or severely delayed. Hundreds of millions in economic damage. Hundreds of thousands of passengers affected.

This weekend’s chaos (January 24-25) is the latest chapter in a relentless saga: bone-chilling -55°C wind chills, 40% disruption rates at Toronto Pearson, cross-border complications with US Winter Storm Fern, and Sunday snow threatening to push disruption rates to 60-80%.

What you should do RIGHT NOW:

  1. Check your flight status (cancellations happening in waves)
  2. Rebook to Monday-Tuesday if possible (use waivers while available)
  3. Pack emergency supplies if you must fly this weekend
  4. Have backup plans (hotel, rental car, alternative airport)
  5. Sign up for airline text alerts (instant notifications)
  6. Monitor weather forecasts (Sunday snow could be worse than current estimates)

Longer-term:

Demand infrastructure investment. Write MPs. Push Transport Canada for action. Canada’s airports weren’t built for this new climate reality, and until billions are invested in cold-weather infrastructure, winter chaos will remain the new normal.

The Arctic blast will end by Tuesday. But another weather system is already forming over the Pacific. And when it hits next week, Canada’s overstretched aviation system will buckle again. Because it always does.

Winter in Canada is far from over. And neither is the travel chaos.


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Related Articles:

For More Resources:

  • Air Canada Travel Alerts: aircanada.com/travel-info/travel-alerts
  • WestJet Travel Advisories: westjet.com/travel-info
  • Toronto Pearson Status: torontopearson.com
  • Environment Canada Warnings: weather.gc.ca/warnings
  • FlightAware Cancellation Tracker: flightaware.com/live/cancelled

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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