Published on : 09 Feb 2026
Breaking: Birmingham Airport access is completely blocked as severe flooding closed the A4545 road in both directions between the M42 and A45 on February 8-9, 2026βstranding thousands of travelers during the UK’s busiest February half-term holiday week. Specialist pumping crews worked through the night but no reopening time has been announced. The brand-new Β£191 million link roadβopened just 14 months agoβis underwater with delays exceeding 3+ hours for journeys that normally take 10 minutes. Here’s everything travelers need to know to reach Birmingham Airport today and avoid missing flights.
Published: February 9, 2026, 11:00 AM GMT Road Closure Began: February 7, 2026, 9:00 PM GMT Status: STILL CLOSED (30+ hours and counting) Affected Road: A4545 (both directions between M42 and A45) Delay Times: 3+ hours on alternative routes Travelers Affected: Thousands during half-term peak Reopening Estimate: UNKNOWN (no timeframe given) Next Update: Awaiting National Highways announcement
Starting Saturday evening February 7, 2026 at 9:00 PM GMT, severe flooding completely closed the A4545βthe primary access road connecting the M42 motorway to Birmingham Airport (BHX). The dual carriageway link road, which opened in December 2024 as part of the Β£191 million M42 Junction 6 improvement scheme, is underwater across multiple lanes with pools deep enough to damage engines and cause vehicle loss of control.
As of Sunday morning February 9, 2026 at 11:00 AM GMTβmore than 30 hours after the initial closureβthe road remains completely shut in both directions. Specialist contractors are using heavy pumping equipment to clear floodwater, but National Highways has given NO estimate for when the road will reopen.
Current Crisis Status:
π« A4545 CLOSED β Both directions between M42 and A45 β° 30+ hours β Closure duration and counting π Deep flooding β Water across full width of carriageway π 3+ hour delays β On alternative routes to airport βοΈ Half-term week β Busiest travel period of February π¨βπ©βπ§βπ¦ Thousands affected β Families, business travelers stranded β No reopening time β National Highways cannot estimate
The A4545 is NOT just another roadβit’s the primary dedicated link between the M42 motorway and Birmingham Airport, opened specifically to solve chronic congestion around the UK’s seventh-busiest airport.
Why This Road Is Critical:
βοΈ Direct M42 connection β Only high-capacity route from motorway to terminal βοΈ Brand new infrastructure β Opened December 2024 (just 14 months old) βοΈ Cost Β£191 million β Part of massive M42 Junction 6 upgrade βοΈ Handles majority of traffic β Most airport-bound vehicles use this route βοΈ Designed to ease congestion β Took pressure off older local roads βοΈ Dual carriageway β Two lanes each direction, high capacity
The Irony:
This ultra-modern roadβdesigned using 21st-century engineering standards to handle floodingβhas failed catastrophically during its first major test. Water pooled across the entire width despite drainage systems that were supposed to prevent exactly this scenario.
“The A4545 is a relatively new dual carriageway that opened at the end of 2024,” explains transportation analyst David Greene. “Its temporary loss has had an outsized impact because traffic that only recently shifted onto this new road has suddenly been pushed back onto older surrounding routes that can’t handle the volume.”
Heavy and persistent rainfall across the West Midlands on Saturday February 7, 2026 overwhelmed drainage systems along the A4545 corridor.
Timeline of the Crisis:
Saturday, Feb 7, 6:00 PM β Heavy rain begins across Birmingham region Saturday, Feb 7, 8:45 PM β Water starts pooling on A4545 carriageway Saturday, Feb 7, 8:58 PM β National Highways issues closure warning Saturday, Feb 7, 9:00 PM β A4545 officially closed both directions Sunday, Feb 8, 4:11 AM β Road still closed, pumping operations continue Sunday, Feb 9, 11:00 AM β STILL CLOSED (30+ hours later)
National Highways Statements:
Saturday 8:58 PM: “The A4545 is closed in both directions between M42 (near Solihull) and A45 (Birmingham Airport) due to flooding. Specialist equipment is en route to clear the flood water.”
Sunday 4:11 AM: “Reminder The A4545 remains closed in both directions between M42 (near Solihull) and A45 (Birmingham Airport) due to flooding. Specialist contractors are working at the scene to clear the flood water from the carriageway.”
Sunday 11:00 AM: No new update provided. Road remains closed.
While aircraft operations are NOT directly affectedβrunways remain open and flights are operating normallyβgetting TO the airport has become a nightmare for thousands of travelers.
Airport Access Crisis:
π Primary access route blocked β A4545 is main approach for most travelers π Bus services disrupted β Coaches cannot use normal routes π Taxi delays massive β 3+ hour journeys from Birmingham city center π ΏοΈ Car park access complicated β Alternative routes congested π₯ Passenger drop-off chaos β Family members unable to reach terminal forecourt
Flights Operating Normally BUT:
βοΈ Passengers missing flights due to inability to reach airport on time βοΈ Staff arriving late creating operational pressures βοΈ Cargo deliveries delayed affecting logistics βοΈ VIP/executive travel disrupted (NEC business park also affected)
Birmingham Airport Statement:
The airport has urged passengers to allow significant extra journey time and check alternative routes before traveling. Airlines including TUI, Jet2, Ryanair, and easyJet have issued alerts warning customers to leave 3-4 hours early for flights during the crisis.
The timing of this flooding couldn’t be worse. February half-term 2026 is one of Birmingham Airport’s busiest weeks of the year, with tens of thousands of UK families departing for:
Popular Half-Term Destinations:
βοΈ Spain β Canary Islands, Costa del Sol, Balearics βοΈ Turkey β Antalya, Bodrum, Istanbul π¦πͺ Dubai β UAE winter sun escapes πͺπ¬ Egypt β Red Sea resorts (Hurghada, Sharm el-Sheikh) πΏ Alps β Ski resorts (France, Switzerland, Austria) πΊπΈ Orlando β Disney, Universal Studios
Why This Week Is Critical:
π School holidays: February 10-14 for most UK regions π Pre-booked packages: Families with non-refundable deposits π Peak pricing: Expensive tickets travelers can’t afford to miss π Limited alternatives: Other UK airports fully booked π Business travel: NEC events, corporate trips
Tour operators including TUI and Jet2 have arranged emergency coaches from alternative drop-off points, but confusion remains widespread.
With the A4545 closed, travelers MUST use alternative routesβall of which are severely congested and adding 2-3 hours to normal journey times.
From M42 Northbound:
1οΈβ£ Exit M42 at Junction 5 (Solihull) 2οΈβ£ Take A41 toward Solihull town center 3οΈβ£ Follow signs to Elmdon/Airport via local roads 4οΈβ£ Rejoin A45 eastbound toward airport β° Normal time: 10 minutes | Current time: 45-60 minutes
From M42 Southbound:
1οΈβ£ Exit M42 at Junction 7 (NEC/Airport) 2οΈβ£ Take A452 toward Bickenhill 3οΈβ£ Navigate local roads to A45 4οΈβ£ Follow A45 to airport terminal β° Normal time: 8 minutes | Current time: 40-55 minutes
From Birmingham City Center:
1οΈβ£ Take A45 Coventry Road (NOT the A4545) 2οΈβ£ Continue straight through Sheldon, Yardley 3οΈβ£ Follow airport signs on A45 4οΈβ£ Expect heavy traffic entire route β° Normal time: 25 minutes | Current time: 90-120 minutes
π RECOMMENDED: Take the train to Birmingham International Station, then transfer to AirRail Link shuttle to terminal.
Train + AirRail Link:
π From Birmingham New Street: 10 minutes by train π AirRail Link shuttle: Free 90-second automated shuttle to terminal β° Total journey: 15-20 minutes door-to-door π° Cost: Β£4-6 train ticket (much cheaper than taxi delays) β Frequency: Trains every 10-15 minutes
This is the FASTEST and MOST RELIABLE way to reach the airport during the A4545 closure.
American, British, and international travelers connecting through Birmingham or departing from BHX face significant disruptions.
US Routes Affected:
πΊπΈ Birmingham β New York JFK (Delta seasonal) πΊπΈ Birmingham β Orlando (Virgin Atlantic, TUI) πΊπΈ Birmingham β Las Vegas (TUI charter)
UK Domestic Routes Hit:
π¬π§ Birmingham β Belfast, Edinburgh, Glasgow β Business travel disrupted π¬π§ Regional connections β Delays cascading across UK network
European Routes Most Affected:
πͺπΈ Spain: Alicante, Malaga, Palma, Tenerife (TUI, Jet2, Ryanair) πΉπ· Turkey: Antalya, Dalaman (Jet2, TUI) π«π· France: Paris CDG, Nice (Air France) π©πͺ Germany: Frankfurt, Munich (Lufthansa) π¦πͺ Dubai: Emirates daily service
Missed Flight Crisis:
Hundreds of passengers have already missed flights Saturday night and Sunday morning due to inability to reach the airport. Airlines are offering rebooking but no compensation since the flooding qualifies as “extraordinary circumstances.”
Under UK261 Regulations, passengers have limited rights when infrastructure failures (like road flooding) cause them to miss flights.
β Rebooking on next available flight if you miss your original departure β Refund if airline cancels due to insufficient passenger check-in β Alternative routing through other UK airports if airline offers
β Compensation for missing flight due to road flooding (extraordinary circumstances) β Hotel/meal costs if you arrive late but flight departed on time β Taxi fare refunds for expensive alternative transport
Insurance Coverage:
Travel insurance may cover costs if you have:
π° Trip delay coverage β Reimburses meals, hotels if delayed 3+ hours π° Missed connection coverage β If you miss separately-booked onward flights π° Cancel for Any Reason β Allows cancellation with 50-75% refund
Critical: Most standard policies do NOT cover missing your flight due to traffic/flooding unless you have premium “Cancel for Any Reason” coverage purchased within 14 days of initial trip deposit.
1οΈβ£ DO NOT drive to airport via M42/A4545 β Road is CLOSED 2οΈβ£ Take the TRAIN to Birmingham International Station + AirRail Link 3οΈβ£ Allow 4+ hours total journey time from anywhere in Birmingham 4οΈβ£ Call airline if running late β they may hold flight or rebook you 5οΈβ£ Monitor airport social media (@bhx_official) for real-time updates 6οΈβ£ Have backup plan ready β Alternative airports, later flights
1οΈβ£ Check A4545 status before leaving home (National Highways website/Twitter) 2οΈβ£ Assume road still closed and plan train route 3οΈβ£ Allow 3+ hours minimum journey time 4οΈβ£ Book train tickets in advance if possible 5οΈβ£ Consider staying near airport Sunday night if Monday morning flight 6οΈβ£ Check flight status obsessivelyβairlines may proactively cancel if too many passengers missing
1οΈβ£ Coordinate via phone β Don’t drive to airport without confirmation 2οΈβ£ Meet at Birmingham International Station instead of terminal 3οΈβ£ Use AirRail Link β Arriving passengers can take free shuttle to station 4οΈβ£ Allow 2+ hours for international arrivals (customs + getting to station) 5οΈβ£ Have patience β Parking lots overcrowded, terminal access complicated
Car Park Access:
π ΏοΈ Long Stay car parks β Still accessible but via complicated diversions π ΏοΈ Short Stay/Drop-off β Extremely congested, 60+ minute delays π ΏοΈ Meet & Greet services β Operating but warn of significant delays π ΏοΈ On-site hotels β Accessible but longer approach via alternative routes
Nearby Airport Hotels:
π¨ Hilton Birmingham Airport β Accessible via A45 (not A4545) π¨ Novotel Birmingham Airport β Direct terminal connection, booking up fast π¨ Holiday Inn Birmingham Airport-NEC β Also affected by flooding delays π¨ Crowne Plaza Birmingham NEC β Alternative option with airport shuttle
Hotels near the airport are 90%+ sold out as stranded travelers and those with Monday early flights book emergency overnight accommodation.
The flooding doesn’t just affect airport travelersβthe National Exhibition Centre (NEC), one of Europe’s largest exhibition venues, is also severely impacted.
Business Disruption:
π’ NEC events this week β Multiple trade shows, conferences affected π’ Business park access β Surrounding corporate offices difficult to reach π’ Hotel guests stranded β NEC hotels hosting thousands of business travelers π’ Corporate travel chaos β Executives missing flights, meetings
The A4545 flooding raises serious questions about the Β£191 million road’s design and resilience.
Key Concerns:
β Why did a brand-new road flood catastrophically during its first major rain event? β Were drainage systems adequate for predictable UK weather? β What happens next winter when similar rainfall occurs? β Will taxpayers fund additional flood prevention infrastructure? β Who is liable for business losses, missed flights, economic damage?
Aviation consultant John Strickland notes: “This incident underscores the vulnerability of ‘last-mile’ surface access to UK regional airports. A single road failure can cripple an entire airport’s operations even when runways are open and aircraft are ready.”
National Highways has given NO official estimate for when the A4545 will reopen.
Best-Case Scenario:
π’ Sunday evening (Feb 9) β Water cleared, road inspected, reopened π’ Monday morning (Feb 10) β Normal operations resume
Realistic Scenario:
π‘ Monday afternoon (Feb 10) β Road reopens with lane restrictions π‘ Tuesday (Feb 11) β Full two-lane operation restored π‘ Congestion lingers through mid-week as backlog clears
Worst-Case Scenario:
π΄ Structural damage discovered β Road must be closed for repairs π΄ Week-long closure β Alternative routes remain only option π΄ Insurance/legal battles β Delays reopening further
“Lessons learned from the present closure of the A4545, including how water has behaved across the landscape and how quickly it has drained away, will inform both short-term mitigation and longer-term design decisions,” states a National Highways spokesperson.
Last Updated: February 9, 2026, 11:00 AM GMT Next Update: When National Highways announces reopening time Status: A4545 CLOSED (30+ hours), no reopening estimate Official Updates: @HighwaysWMIDS on X (Twitter)
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