Published on : 04 Jan 2026
Breaking: Caribbean flights resumed Sunday morning, January 4, 2026 after FAA lifted 24-hour airspace restrictions—with American Airlines adding 17 extra flights (3,700+ seats), Southwest adding 14 extra roundtrips to Puerto Rico, and Delta/United deploying larger widebody aircraft typically used for Europe/Asia routes to clear massive passenger backlog. Over 50,000 travelers stranded Saturday across 20+ Caribbean destinations now scrambling to get home as airlines restore normal schedules while warning “several days” needed for full recovery. Only 20 cancellations remain Sunday (vs 400+ Saturday) but delays continue.
Published: January 4, 2026 (Updated 11 AM ET) Airspace Reopened: 12:00 AM ET Sunday, January 4 Saturday Chaos: 900 cancellations, 4,000+ delays Sunday Status: Normal operations resuming, 20 cancellations only Extra Capacity: 30+ additional flights, widebody aircraft deployed Recovery Timeline: “Several days” to clear backlog fully
US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy confirmed late Saturday night that Caribbean airspace restrictions expired at midnight ET, allowing airlines to resume normal operations Sunday.
“The original restrictions around the Caribbean airspace are expiring at 12:00am ET and flights can resume,” Duffy wrote on X. “Airlines are informed, and will update their schedules quickly.”
Within hours, airlines announced massive capacity additions:
American Airlines (Biggest Response):
Southwest Airlines:
Delta Air Lines:
United Airlines:
JetBlue Airways:
The FAA’s 24-hour airspace closure—triggered by US military strikes on Venezuela and capture of President Nicolás Maduro early Saturday—created unprecedented Caribbean travel chaos:
By the Numbers:
Hardest Hit Airlines Saturday:
FlightAware data shows dramatic improvement Sunday:
Sunday vs Saturday:
“Even after removal of curbs, airlines will need several days to restore normal operations,” warned airline analyst Robert Mann. “They have a day’s worth of passengers basically stranded in Caribbean.”
Photo Evidence: Reuters images show passengers sleeping on Luis Muñoz Marín Airport floors Saturday night—luggage scattered, families camping on hard tile, exhaustion visible.
Stephen Levine (Stuck in Puerto Rico): Originally scheduled to fly home Saturday, Levine and his wife spent hours trying to reach JetBlue. The airline finally rebooked them—but for NEXT Saturday, turning their week-long New Year vacation into two weeks.
“I’m fortunate to have a flexible employer,” Levine said. “But my daughter will miss a week of high school.”
Aruba Airport: Queen Beatrix International Airport—just 15 miles from Venezuelan coast—saw complete shutdown Saturday. Officials expect normal operations Sunday after day of cancelled flights.
Puerto Rico Terminals: Photos from Jose Aponte de la Torre Airport show passengers wandering terminals in confusion after ALL flights cancelled Saturday morning.
Caribbean cruise passengers faced unique challenges—unable to board ships or get home after disembarking.
Virgin Voyages: Valiant Lady scheduled to depart San Juan Saturday for 7-night Aruban cruise couldn’t wait for passengers whose flights cancelled.
Company Statement: “Airline travelers unable to make it to San Juan in time for cruise departure will be able to get full credit for future trip.”
Multiple Ships Arriving Sunday:
All require disembarking passengers to have functioning flights home—Sunday recovery critical for smooth operations.
All major carriers waiving change fees for affected passengers:
American Airlines:
JetBlue Airways:
Southwest Airlines:
Delta Air Lines:
United Airlines:
Spirit/Frontier:
Foreign Airlines:
The Military Operation: Early Saturday morning (3 AM ET), US military conducted large-scale strikes on Venezuela, capturing President Nicolás Maduro and wife Cilia Flores, flying them to New York for federal custody.
Immediate FAA Response: Federal Aviation Administration restricted Caribbean airspace 6 AM Saturday citing “safety-of-flight risks associated with ongoing military activity.”
150 US Military Aircraft: The operation involved jets, helicopters, drones—creating massive airspace conflicts requiring commercial aviation shutdown for safety.
Recent Near-Miss: November 2025 near mid-air collision between JetBlue airliner and US aerial refueling tanker near Venezuela heightened safety fears.
Foreign Airlines Exempt: Only US carriers grounded—Canadian (Air Canada, WestJet), European (KLM), Latin American airlines continued operating.
If Flying to/from Caribbean Today:
Before Leaving Home:
If Your Flight Operates:
If Still Stranded:
Under US DOT Rules:
This Qualifies as “Extraordinary Circumstance”: Government-ordered airspace closure = airlines NOT required to pay:
BUT Airlines MUST Provide:
Travel Insurance May Cover:
File claims with:
Sunday (January 4):
Monday-Tuesday (January 5-6):
Wednesday+ (January 7+):
“Several days needed to restore normal operations,” confirmed airline analyst Robert Mann.
Venezuela holds world’s largest oil reserves—Trump stated US plans to “run” Venezuela and tap reserves.
Potential Impacts:
Short-Term (Days-Weeks):
Long-Term (Months):
Wild Cards:
This Crisis Teaches:
1. Geopolitics Disrupt Travel Instantly Military action 1,000 miles away grounded Caribbean’s busiest airport.
2. Travel Insurance Essential Trip delay coverage would have paid hotels, meals for stranded passengers.
3. Flexibility Required Rigid schedules near potential conflict zones = high risk.
4. Check Status Before Airport Don’t assume flight operates during crises.
5. Foreign Airlines Exempt Air Canada, KLM continued flying while US carriers grounded.
Caribbean flights resumed Sunday morning after 24-hour closure, but full recovery requires “several days” as airlines clear 50,000+ stranded passengers through extra flights, larger aircraft, and extended fee waivers.
American’s 17 extra flights (3,700 seats), Southwest’s 14 Puerto Rico roundtrips, and widebody deployments demonstrate airlines’ massive response to unprecedented government-ordered shutdown affecting 20+ Caribbean destinations during peak holiday travel.
While Sunday shows only 20 cancellations (vs 400 Saturday), delays continue as crews reach duty limits, aircraft reposition from diversions, and passengers rebook onto already-full flights creating cascading complications throughout Sunday-Tuesday recovery period.
For travelers: Check flight status before leaving for airport. Expect delays even for “confirmed” flights. Airlines waiving fees through Tuesday, January 6—rebook now if flexibility needed.
The crisis proves how vulnerable Caribbean tourism is to geopolitical events—with single military operation instantly stranding tens of thousands and crippling region’s economic lifeline.
For More Resources:
Airline Customer Service:
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Posted By : Vinay
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