Published on : 21 Apr 2026
Breaking: London’s two busiest central airports have recorded 128 delays and 20 cancellations — 148 total disruptions on Tuesday, April 21, 2026 — and passengers trying to reach Heathrow by public transport are facing a second crisis simultaneously. London Heathrow International Airport (LHR) — the UK’s busiest airport and one of the world’s most important aviation hubs — accounts for 112 delays and 7 cancellations. London City Airport (LCY) records 16 delays and 13 cancellations — an unusually high cancellation rate for the compact, business-focused airport. British Airways, FlyDubai, and Royal Jordanian are among the disrupted carriers, with routes to New York, Dubai, Riyadh, Paris, and Edinburgh all affected. And making every disruption harder to manage: the RMT London Underground strike began at midday today, taking the Piccadilly line — the primary Tube route to Heathrow — completely out of service through midday Friday April 24. Passengers already delayed at Heathrow cannot get home by Tube. Passengers trying to reach Heathrow for evening flights face a ground transport crisis on top of an aviation crisis. Here is every number, every airline, every right under UK261, and every alternative way to reach the airport.
Published: April 21, 2026 — Tuesday Combined Total: 148 disruptions (128 delays + 20 cancellations) across LHR + LCY London Heathrow (LHR): 112 delays + 7 cancellations = 119 total London City Airport (LCY): 16 delays + 13 cancellations = 29 total Carriers Most Disrupted: British Airways · FlyDubai · Royal Jordanian Routes Broken: New York · Dubai · Riyadh · Paris · Edinburgh (and domestic UK) FlyDubai/Royal Jordanian context: Middle East airspace crisis + Dubai one-flight-per-day cap (active since April 20) directly affecting these carriers Compounding Crisis: RMT Tube strike — Piccadilly line (LHR’s primary Tube link) DOWN from midday today through midday Friday April 24 Lines NOT running: Piccadilly · Circle · Metropolitan (Baker Street–Aldgate) · Central (White City–Liverpool Street) Lines RUNNING normally: Elizabeth line (Heathrow) · Heathrow Express · DLR (City Airport) · London Overground Official Heathrow advisory: “Due to the ongoing situation in the Middle East and resulting airspace closures, a small number of flights at Heathrow have been cancelled or delayed. Due to planned strike action, there will be little to no service across all London Underground services, including the Piccadilly line to Heathrow, between April 21 and 24.” Passengers Affected: Tens of thousands across both airports today
April 21, 2026 is shaping up as one of the most operationally complex single days at London Heathrow in 2026 — and it is not because of any single cause. Today is a convergence of three separate problems hitting London’s aviation and transport network simultaneously:
🔴 Aviation disruption from the Middle East crisis (cause 1): The Dubai one-flight-per-day foreign airline cap took effect yesterday, April 20. FlyDubai — a Dubai government-owned carrier that operates significant UK services — is directly operating under that cap framework. Royal Jordanian is navigating residual Middle East airspace constraints that have disrupted the carrier throughout April. British Airways, as Heathrow’s largest operator, is absorbing both the tail-end of the post-Easter positioning deficit that has driven UK aviation disruption since Good Friday, and the ongoing Middle East airspace complications affecting its Gulf-routed services.
🔴 The London Underground RMT strike (cause 2 — begins midday today): At noon today, RMT union drivers on the London Underground began a 24-hour walkout that will last through midday tomorrow, Wednesday April 22. A second 24-hour strike follows midday Thursday April 23 through midday Friday April 24. The critical airport impact: the Piccadilly line — which runs directly from central London (King’s Cross, Green Park, Earls Court) through all four Heathrow terminals — has no service. Passengers with afternoon, evening, or overnight departures from Heathrow have no Tube access.
🔴 The cascading UK aviation calendar (cause 3): April 21 marks Day 21 of the post-Easter US disruption cascade, which has been generating positioning failures for transatlantic aircraft. Planes that were supposed to arrive at Heathrow from North America have been running 2–6 hours late throughout the past three weeks, affecting BA’s turnaround schedules and creating the downstream delays visible in today’s 112-delay Heathrow total.
112 delays + 7 cancellations = 119 total disruptions at LHR today.
Heathrow is the UK’s largest airport and processes approximately 1,300 aircraft movements on a peak day across its two runways. With that volume and virtually zero scheduling slack — Heathrow operates at near-maximum capacity every day — any positioning failure, any airspace restriction, any late inbound aircraft cascades immediately into a downstream delay chain.
British Airways operates approximately 55–60% of all Heathrow movements, making it the dominant cause and victim of any LHR disruption day. Today is no exception. BA’s delay count at Heathrow reflects several compounding factors:
Transatlantic positioning deficit: BA’s overnight services from North America — from New York JFK, Boston, Washington DC, Los Angeles, and other US cities — have been arriving 2–4 hours late throughout April due to the US aviation system’s 21-day post-Easter disruption cascade. When a BA flight from JFK arrives 3 hours late at Terminal 5, the aircraft that was supposed to depart to Paris at 9am is already 3 hours behind before the day has started.
Middle East routing impact: BA has suspended all Dubai flights until May 31 — a direct consequence of the Iran war airspace closures and the Dubai foreign airline one-flight-per-day cap. While this removes one route from BA’s LHR operation, it has also disrupted crew and aircraft rotations that previously cycled through Gulf routes, creating positioning gaps that are visible in today’s delay count.
The routes affected today:
What BA passengers at LHR must do: ✅ BA app exclusively — British Airways’ phone lines are running significant wait times on a disruption day. The BA app processes flight status changes, rebooking, and meal voucher requests faster than any alternative channel ✅ Check your inbound aircraft at ba.com/flightstatus before leaving home — if your aircraft is still at JFK or CDG, your Heathrow departure will be late ✅ If delayed 2+ hours: You are entitled to meal vouchers and refreshments under UK261 Article 9 — request at the Terminal 5 service desk immediately; do not wait for the airline to offer them ✅ If cancelled: You hold the choice between a full cash refund to your original payment method OR rebooking on the next available BA or partner flight — the airline cannot force you to accept a voucher
FlyDubai is a Dubai government-owned low-cost carrier that operates services from Heathrow to Dubai (DXB) and other destinations. Today’s FlyDubai disruptions at Heathrow are directly connected to the Dubai foreign airline cap that took effect yesterday. FlyDubai itself is classified as a Dubai-based carrier and is nominally exempt from the one-rotation-per-day cap that applies to British Airways, Lufthansa, KLM, and other foreign airlines. However, FlyDubai’s ability to operate normal services depends on the broader Middle Eastern airspace conditions — and those remain volatile following Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz on April 18 (two days after a brief reopening on April 17).
Key FlyDubai passenger information:
Royal Jordanian operates services from Heathrow to Amman’s Queen Alia International Airport — a route that connects UK passengers to a critical Middle East hub through which onward connections to Beirut, Baghdad, and other regional destinations flow. The airline has been navigating April with a “near-normal” schedule at Amman itself, but UK–Amman services have faced disruption driven by UK airspace management and the cascading Middle East instability.
Royal Jordanian passenger rights and options:
Heathrow serves Saudi Arabia through multiple carriers, and Riyadh services are among the most commercially important routes operating from the airport. The disruptions today on routes to Riyadh reflect the broader Middle East airspace turbulence: Saudia’s operations through Riyadh have been affected by regional instability; British Airways’ Riyadh service has been suspended; and the reduced field of operating carriers means the Heathrow–Riyadh corridor is operating at reduced frequency with corresponding delay pressure.
16 delays + 13 cancellations = 29 total disruptions at LCY today.
London City Airport’s 13-cancellation total today is disproportionately high relative to the airport’s size. London City processes approximately 400 aircraft movements per day — making today’s 13 cancellations a 3.25% cancellation rate, compared to LHR’s 0.5% cancellation rate from its 7 cancellations against 1,300 movements.
The explanation is structural. London City operates almost exclusively with smaller narrow-body aircraft — Embraer E190, ATR 72, and Boeing 737 — serving primarily European business routes. London City’s extremely steep approach path (a 5.5° glide slope vs the standard 3°) means only specific aircraft types can land there, and the airport has strict operating hours and slot restrictions that make schedule recovery from disruption harder than at Heathrow.
When a London City arrival is disrupted, there is often no larger available aircraft that can substitute, and the slot restrictions mean that recovery windows are tight. The result: more cancellations, fewer delayed-but-eventually-operated flights.
London City’s most affected routes today:
London City Airport access during the Tube strike: London City is the ONE airport that is largely unaffected by the Piccadilly line strike. The DLR (Docklands Light Railway) connects London City Airport directly to Bank station in the City of London in approximately 22 minutes. The DLR is not affected by the RMT strike. However, trains will be busier than usual as passengers reroute away from Tube lines. Allow extra time.
This is the most immediately actionable section for the majority of passengers flying from London today and for the rest of this week.
The RMT underground drivers’ strike began at 12:00 noon today, Tuesday April 21, 2026. It will run through 11:59 AM Wednesday April 22. A second strike period then runs from 12:00 PM Thursday April 23 through 11:59 AM Friday April 24. Six more strike dates are scheduled in May and June 2026 as part of the ongoing dispute over a proposed four-day working week for drivers.
NOT running (no service at all):
RUNNING normally:
Option 1 — Elizabeth Line (Recommended): Find your nearest Elizabeth line station (stations include Paddington, Bond Street, Tottenham Court Road, Farringdon, Whitechapel, Liverpool Street, Stratford, and many others). Take the Elizabeth line westbound towards Heathrow. All four Heathrow terminals are served — Terminal 5 has its own station, Terminals 2/3 share a station. Cost: TfL standard fare (approximately £10.80 from central London with an Oyster or contactless card). Allow extra time — trains will be busier than normal.
Option 2 — Heathrow Express from Paddington: If you are near Paddington or can reach Paddington (Victoria line runs with reduced service, District line reduced service — check TfL). Non-stop to Heathrow in 15–21 minutes. More expensive but fastest option with luggage. Pre-book at heathrowexpress.com for best fares; walk-up fares are £25+.
Option 3 — National Express Coach: National Express operates coach services from London Victoria Coach Station directly to Heathrow Central Bus Station (Terminals 2/3), running frequently. Journey time varies with traffic: typically 45–75 minutes. Pre-book at nationalexpress.com. Cost: approximately £6–15 depending on advance booking.
Option 4 — Black Cab / Taxi: All Heathrow terminals are accessible by road. Metered fares from central London to Heathrow typically £50–80 depending on origin and traffic. Expect significantly higher traffic today and throughout the strike period. Allow 90+ minutes from central London by road.
Option 5 — Rideshare (Uber/Bolt): Surge pricing will apply during strike periods. Pre-book where possible. Drop-off at Heathrow Terminal 5 or 2/3 drop-off zones — there is a £7 drop-off charge per vehicle at the terminal.
If you are arriving at Heathrow today or this week and planned to take the Tube home, the Piccadilly line is not running after noon. Your options:
Important note on Heathrow parking: Heathrow’s official passenger update states that if you have an active parking booking and are away, when you return and are ready to leave the car park, press the intercom at the barrier — a team member will lift it for you, and no additional parking charges will apply for disruption-related delays.
| Airport | Code | Delays | Cancellations | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| London Heathrow International | LHR | 112 | 7 | 119 |
| London City Airport | LCY | 16 | 13 | 29 |
| LONDON COMBINED TOTAL | — | 128 | 20 | 148 |
| Carrier | Key Routes Affected | UK261 Compensation |
|---|---|---|
| British Airways | New York JFK/EWR, Paris CDG, Edinburgh EDI, Edinburgh, Glasgow | ✅ Applies if within BA control |
| FlyDubai | Dubai DXB, regional Middle East connections | ✅ UK261 from UK airports |
| Royal Jordanian | Amman AMM + onward Middle East connections | ✅ UK261 from UK airports |
| American Airlines | New York connections via LHR hub | ✅ Applies for LHR-departing flights |
| Virgin Atlantic | New York JFK, Los Angeles, other transatlantic | ✅ UK261 fully applicable |
UK Regulation 261 — the UK’s retained version of EU261, applicable since Brexit — is the primary legal protection for all passengers departing from any UK airport, on any carrier.
✅ Article 8 — Full cash refund or rebooking (your choice): The airline must offer you either a full cash refund to your original payment method OR rebooking on the next available flight. You choose — not the airline. Airlines often try to push passengers toward rebooking or travel credits. You are entitled to say: “Under UK261 Article 8, I am requesting a full cash refund to my original payment method.”
✅ Article 9 — Duty of care (meals, accommodation, transport): If you choose rebooking and your wait exceeds 2 hours, the airline must provide:
Article 9 applies even during extraordinary circumstances — even if your cancellation is caused by Middle East airspace restrictions (extraordinary) or weather, you are still entitled to meals and accommodation while you wait. Airlines frequently fail to communicate this.
| Delay at departure | Your entitlement |
|---|---|
| 2+ hours | Meals and refreshments — request at airline desk immediately |
| 3+ hours arrival delay (controllable cause) | Full cash refund right OR rebooking |
| Overnight stranding (controllable cause) | Hotel + transport to hotel |
UK261 Article 7 entitles you to cash compensation when cancellation or significant delay is caused by reasons within the airline’s operational control — not extraordinary circumstances.
| Route Distance | UK Compensation Per Passenger |
|---|---|
| Under 1,500 km (e.g. LHR → Edinburgh, Paris, Amsterdam) | £220 |
| 1,500–3,500 km (e.g. LHR → Amman) | £350 |
| Over 3,500 km (e.g. LHR → New York, Dubai) | £520 |
Does compensation apply today?
For British Airways delays caused by operational factors (crew positioning, mechanical issues, late inbound aircraft within BA’s own network): ✅ YES — compensation applies when arrival delay exceeds 3 hours and cause is within BA’s control.
For FlyDubai and Royal Jordanian cancellations directly caused by Middle East airspace restrictions: ❌ Likely extraordinary circumstances — compensation may not apply, but refund and duty of care still do.
For delays caused by the London Tube strike (ground transport delay rather than flight delay): ❌ The Tube strike does not affect compensation eligibility for flights — your flight delay is assessed at aircraft level, not ground transport level.
British Airways: ba.com/compensation | Terminal 5 Customer Service Desk FlyDubai: flydubai.com/help | Terminal 2 desk Royal Jordanian: rj.com/help | Terminal 3 desk UK CAA: caa.co.uk/passengers — escalate rejected claims here | 6-year claim window AirHelp: airhelp.com — third-party claims service (25–35% fee but handles disputes)
Step 1 — Check your inbound aircraft BEFORE leaving home Search your flight number at flightaware.com. Click “inbound flight.” If your aircraft is delayed at JFK, CDG, DXB, or AMM, your Heathrow departure will be late. This is the single most important action for any passenger today.
Step 2 — Plan your ground transport NOW — Piccadilly line is not running
| Your origin | Best option to LHR |
|---|---|
| Paddington area | Heathrow Express (15–21 min, £25+) or Elizabeth line (23 min, ~£10.80) |
| Central London (Bond St, TCR, Farringdon) | Elizabeth line direct |
| East London / Liverpool Street | Elizabeth line westbound |
| Victoria area | Bus or National Express coach (Circle line down) |
| South London | National Express coach or taxi |
Step 3 — Arrive earlier than usual Elizabeth line and Heathrow Express trains will be significantly busier than normal today. Allow 30 minutes extra on top of your normal travel time to the airport. Add 15 minutes for security queues, which also tend to be longer on high-disruption days.
Step 4 — Use airline apps not queues
Step 5 — If your flight is cancelled, act in this order
Step 6 — If you’re arriving at LHR and need to get into London The Piccadilly line is not running from Heathrow. Take the Elizabeth line from Heathrow Terminal 5 or Terminal 2/3 into Paddington (23 min) or further east. Or take the Heathrow Express to Paddington (15 min). Both run normally. Both will be busy.
| Date | Strike Period | Piccadilly Line (Heathrow) | Elizabeth Line | Heathrow Express |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tue 21 Apr | 12:00 noon → 11:59 AM Wed | ❌ NO SERVICE | ✅ Running | ✅ Running |
| Wed 22 Apr | Strike ends 12:00 noon — recovery until evening | ⚠️ Disrupted until afternoon | ✅ Running | ✅ Running |
| Thu 23 Apr | 12:00 noon → 11:59 AM Fri | ❌ NO SERVICE | ✅ Running | ✅ Running |
| Fri 24 Apr | Strike ends 12:00 noon — recovery until evening | ⚠️ Disrupted until afternoon | ✅ Running | ✅ Running |
Further strike dates in May and June 2026: The RMT has confirmed six additional 24-hour strike periods across the coming months. TfL and the RMT have not reached a deal on the proposed four-day working week for drivers. If you are travelling through London to or from Heathrow in May or June, check tube.tfl.gov.uk for updated strike dates before booking your ground transport.
| Service | Contact | Action |
|---|---|---|
| British Airways | ba.com / BA app | Rebooking, refunds, meal vouchers |
| FlyDubai | flydubai.com / app | Schedule changes, refunds |
| Royal Jordanian | rj.com / +44 20 7878 6300 | Rebooking, rerouting, vouchers |
| Heathrow Airport | heathrow.com/passenger-updates | Live flight information |
| London City Airport | londoncityairport.com | Flight status |
| Heathrow Express | heathrowexpress.com | Book alternative transport |
| Elizabeth Line Status | tfl.gov.uk/elizabeth-line | Real-time service status |
| TfL Journey Planner | tfl.gov.uk | Plan alternative routes |
| FlightAware | flightaware.com/live/airport/EGLL | LHR live inbound tracking |
| UK CAA Passenger Rights | caa.co.uk/passengers | File UK261 complaints |
| AirHelp (compensation) | airhelp.com | Third-party EU/UK261 claims |
| National Express | nationalexpress.com | Coach to LHR from Victoria |
Tuesday April 21, 2026 is London’s most disrupted aviation day of the week — 148 total disruptions across Heathrow and London City, including 112 delays and 7 cancellations at Heathrow, and 16 delays and 13 cancellations at the compact London City Airport. British Airways, FlyDubai, and Royal Jordanian are the most directly affected carriers, with New York, Dubai, Riyadh, Paris, and Edinburgh routes all disrupted. The FlyDubai and Royal Jordanian disruptions are directly connected to the Middle East aviation crisis — the Dubai one-flight-per-day foreign airline cap activated yesterday, and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed following Iran’s April 18 re-closure.
Making everything harder: the RMT London Underground strike began at noon today, taking the Piccadilly line — Heathrow’s primary Tube link — completely out of service through midday Friday April 24. Every passenger flying from or arriving at Heathrow today and through Friday must use the Elizabeth line or Heathrow Express instead.
If you are at or travelling to LHR or LCY today:
The Tube strike runs through midday Friday April 24. The aviation disruption continues. Plan your journey now — not at the station.
Related Articles:
Sources: (London Heathrow and City Airport disruption data, April 21, 2026 — LHR 112 delays/7 cancellations, LCY 16 delays/13 cancellations; carriers: British Airways, FlyDubai, Royal Jordanian; routes: New York, Dubai, Riyadh, Paris, Edinburgh), Heathrow Airport Official Passenger Updates page (Middle East disruption advisory + Tube strike advisory, April 21, 2026), FlightAware (LHR live data), UK Civil Aviation Authority UK261 passenger rights regulations
Posted By : Vinay
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