Published on : 12 May 2026
Today is the first day of America’s summer travel season. This is how it opened.
Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport reported a staggering 303 delayed flights and 11 cancellations, while Miami International Airport recorded 223 delays and 11 cancellations on May 12, 2026. Over 520 flight delays and 22 cancellations have plagued two of the busiest US airports in a single day. Major carriers including American Airlines, Southwest Airlines, United Airlines, and SkyWest Airlines are the most affected. Experts believe these disruptions stem from a combination of high passenger demand, air traffic congestion, and ongoing operational challenges at key US airports.
Combined: 548 disruptions at two airports. On the same day. The day that tens of millions of Americans, Europeans and Australians have begun thinking of as the start of their summer travel window.
As air travel demand continues to grow, airlines are struggling to keep up with the pace, leading to disruptions affecting a wide range of passengers β from business travellers to families heading for summer vacations.
The FAA’s O’Hare summer cap β the structural intervention that was supposed to begin relieving 42 days of accumulated national disruption β is five days away. Between today and May 17, the US aviation system is operating at full pre-cap pressure levels with summer demand volumes that are meaningfully higher than anything seen in April. Phoenix is recording its third consecutive 300+ delay day. Miami is simultaneously absorbing the Caribbean and Latin America gateway traffic that Spirit Airlines used to serve β now pushed entirely onto American, Southwest, Frontier and LATAM. Today is the day the summer season crisis arrived.
Published: May 12, 2026 β Tuesday (Day 42 Β· Summer Season Opens Β· FAA Cap Minus 5 Days) PHX total disruptions today: 314 β 303 delays + 11 cancellations MIA total disruptions today: 234 β 223 delays + 11 cancellations Combined PHX + MIA total: 548 disruptions today Day 42 milestone: 6 full weeks of continuous elevated US disruption FAA O’Hare summer cap: π΄ 5 days away β May 17 β the countdown is critical Summer season status: Official opening week β demand up 12β15% nationally vs last May Memorial Day: π΄ 13 days away β May 25 β highest US travel demand day of the year PHX worst carrier today: American Airlines β 60 delays (May 11 precedent) + Southwest 49 MIA worst carriers: American Airlines (primary) Β· Frontier (7% cancel rate) Β· Southwest (23% delay rate) MIA international carriers disrupted: Turkish Airlines Β· TAP Air Portugal Β· Air Europa Β· Royal Air Maroc Β· Air Canada Β· LATAM PHX international routes hit: Dallas Β· Toronto Β· London Β· Paris Β· Calgary Β· Denver Β· Atlanta MIA international routes hit: Toronto Β· SΓ£o Paulo Β· Dallas Β· New York City Β· Casablanca MIA overnight layovers reported: Toronto (Air Canada) + SΓ£o Paulo (LATAM) passengers facing overnight stays Spirit absence impact at MIA: 2nd month without Spirit β Caribbean/LA displacement surge ongoing PHX British Airways: Delays confirmed β London route affected DOT refund right: β Mandatory for all cancellations β 7 business days DOT summer commitment: β Meals at 3hr controllable delay Β· Hotel for controllable overnight
The simultaneous collapse of two major US hubs on the same day is not a coincidence. It is what happens when 42 days of accumulated network disruption meets the annual surge in summer travel demand β and neither the O’Hare cap (5 days away) nor the Spirit capacity absorption (now in its second month) has been resolved.
Phoenix and Miami are not random victims. They are structurally the most exposed non-O’Hare hubs in the US to a sustained disruption sequence.
Phoenix Sky Harbor’s exposure: As one of the busiest airports in the US, Phoenix plays a crucial role in connecting travellers to both domestic and international locations. Its operational efficiency is critical for both business and leisure travel, making disruptions like these particularly impactful. PHX is the dominant western hub for American Airlines and a critical Southwest point-to-point node. It sits at the convergence of Chicago cascade delays (from O’Hare feeding American’s hub), Dallas cascade delays (from DFW feeding American’s network), and Las Vegas/Denver summer leisure demand. When all three cascade sources activate simultaneously on the first week of summer season, Phoenix absorbs them all.
The delays at Phoenix Sky Harbor were not just limited to the larger carriers. This recent disturbance highlights the interconnected nature of the aviation industry β a single airport disruption can have a cascading effect on multiple carriers and flight routes, disrupting travellers’ plans across the US and abroad.
Miami International Airport’s exposure: Miami’s dual role as America’s Caribbean and Latin America gateway AND its role as Spirit Airlines’ former second-largest hub creates a specific vulnerability. The disruption was not limited to domestic routes. International carriers including Air Europa, Royal Air Maroc, TAP Air Portugal, and Turkish Airlines all reported delays on their Miami services. Travellers bound for Toronto via Air Canada and SΓ£o Paulo via LATAM were particularly affected, with many facing overnight layovers in Miami as they waited for rebooking options in an already saturated market.
Spirit’s absence is the invisible hand at MIA. Every Spirit seat that used to connect Chicago, New York, Detroit and Baltimore to Miami has been absorbed by American, Southwest, Frontier and JetBlue. Those carriers are operating with higher loads, smaller buffers, and the same infrastructure. When demand rises by 12%+ at the start of summer and the airline with the lowest yield and highest frequency has been removed from the market, the remaining carriers run hotter. Hotter operations in summer heat means more delays, more weight restrictions, more cascades.
Today is not Phoenix’s first 300-delay day this week. It is the third.
Phoenix Sky Harbor recorded 303 delays and 11 cancellations on May 10, with routes to Dallas, Toronto, London, Paris, Albuquerque, Atlanta, Austin, Nashville, Denver, Calgary and multiple other cities affected.
On May 11, Phoenix recorded 174 delays and 7 cancellations β a slight respite from the prior day’s peak but still significantly elevated above pre-crisis norms. Southwest alone accounted for 49 delayed flights and American Airlines had 60 delayed flights.
Today β May 12 β Phoenix is back above 300 delays with 303 + 11 cancellations = 314 total. The three-day pattern at PHX mirrors the same pattern O’Hare showed in late April: no single catastrophic event, just sustained systemic overload that never allows the airport to reset.
The PHX summer construction factor: Phoenix Sky Harbor is simultaneously running one of the largest terminal renovation and expansion programmes of any US airport. New terminals and facility upgrades β while beneficial long-term β compress ground-level operations during construction. Aircraft are handling on sections of the tarmac, temporary gates reduce boarding efficiency, and construction-related ground delays add minutes to every turnaround. On a day with 303 scheduled departures and 303 delays, those extra minutes compound catastrophically.
The PhoenixβLondon and PhoenixβParis angles: London and Paris are among the international destinations affected by Phoenix’s May 12 disruptions. British Airways operates a PhoenixβLondon Heathrow service, and Air France/American’s codeshare connects Phoenix to Paris. UK and European passengers at PHX today face EU261 rights from European-carrier coded flights β details in the rights section below.
Miami International Airport is grappling with a wave of severe disruptions. The crisis has hit the “Gateway to the Americas” at a time of peak traveller volume, primarily impacting American Airlines, Frontier, United, and Southwest. Hundreds of passengers are stranded across MIA’s sprawling terminals, with critical routes to Dallas, Atlanta, Toronto, and New York City bearing the brunt of the instability.
Miami’s disruption has two distinct layers today:
Layer 1 β Domestic cascade: The O’Hare and Atlanta cascades that have driven national disruption since April 1 are still feeding late inbounds into MIA from the northeast and midwest. American’s MIA connection banking β which coordinates domestic arrivals from New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Atlanta with international departures to the Caribbean and Latin America β is failing when those domestic inbounds arrive 60β90 minutes late.
Layer 2 β International displacement: International carriers including Turkish Airlines, TAP Air Portugal, Air Europa, and Royal Air Maroc all reported delays. Travellers bound for Toronto via Air Canada and SΓ£o Paulo via LATAM were particularly affected, with many facing overnight layovers in Miami. These are passengers who purchased transatlantic itineraries routing through Miami β and who are now stranded overnight at a Florida airport instead of continuing to South America or Europe.
The overnight layover at Miami has a specific financial bite that the disruption data doesn’t capture: Miami International Airport area hotels are running at summer rates. A passenger stranded overnight at MIA tonight is looking at $180β$280 per night for anything within reasonable airport distance. That is the duty of care obligation that American, Frontier, or whichever carrier caused the controllable portion of the delay owes β but which only triggers if the delay cause is within the airline’s control.
The Frontier 7% cancellation rate: Frontier Airlines saw a 7% cancellation rate at MIA β for these carriers, the disruptions meant that aircraft and crews were unable to cycle back to other hubs like Atlanta or Nashville, spreading the travel chaos across the Eastern Seaboard. Frontier’s hub is Denver β when its MIA aircraft cannot complete their rotation because of a Miami delay, the aircraft that was supposed to depart Denver for Orlando at 08:00 using the MIA-returned aircraft is cancelled. One MIA delay produces two disruptions at two different airports.
| Route | Carriers | Risk Today | International? |
|---|---|---|---|
| PHX β Dallas (DFW/DAL) | American / Southwest | π΄ HIGH | No |
| PHX β Chicago (ORD/MDW) | American / Southwest / United | π΄ HIGH | No β but O’Hare cascade source |
| PHX β Los Angeles (LAX) | American / Southwest / Delta / Alaska | π ELEVATED | No |
| PHX β Denver (DEN) | United / Southwest / Frontier | π ELEVATED | No |
| PHX β London Heathrow (LHR) | British Airways | π ELEVATED | β EU261 applies β BA is European carrier |
| PHX β Paris (CDG) | American / Air France codeshare | π ELEVATED | EU261 on Air France-coded legs |
| PHX β Toronto (YYZ) | American / Air Canada | π‘ MODERATE | APPR (Canada) applies |
| PHX β Calgary (YYC) | WestJet / American | π‘ MODERATE | APPR applies |
| PHX β Las Vegas (LAS) | Southwest / American / Delta | π‘ MODERATE | No |
| Route | Carriers | Risk Today | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| MIA β Dallas (DFW) | American | π΄ HIGH | Primary domestic cascade source for MIA |
| MIA β New York (JFK/LGA/EWR) | American / Delta / JetBlue | π΄ HIGH | Northeast corridor under dual pressure |
| MIA β Atlanta (ATL) | American / Delta / Southwest | π΄ HIGH | Delta hub crisis feeding MIA |
| MIA β SΓ£o Paulo (GRU) | LATAM / American | π ELEVATED | Overnight layovers confirmed |
| MIA β Toronto (YYZ) | Air Canada | π ELEVATED | APPR applies β overnight layovers confirmed |
| MIA β Istanbul (IST) | Turkish Airlines | π ELEVATED | 60% delay rate on Turkish MIA services |
| MIA β Lisbon / Porto | TAP Air Portugal | π ELEVATED | EU261 applies (TAP = European carrier) |
| MIA β Morocco | Royal Air Maroc | π‘ MODERATE | Check booking specifically |
| Caribbean (Nassau, MBJ, etc) | American | π‘ MODERATE | Spirit-displaced demand surge ongoing |
American Airlines operates Phoenix as its second-largest western hub and Miami as its primary Caribbean/Latin America international gateway. Today American is under simultaneous pressure at both airports β a two-front disruption that cascades back through its DFW and PHL connection banks.
American Airlines had 60 delayed flights at Phoenix, marking significant operational challenges. These delays not only cause frustration among passengers but also have a ripple effect on other connecting flights across the United States and internationally.
American’s active waiver for Belgium (May 11β12) expired today β check aa.com β Travel Alerts for any active PHX or MIA weather/operational waivers that may apply to today’s disruptions.
Southwest alone accounted for 49 delayed flights at Phoenix. Southwest struggled with a 23% delay rate at Miami. Southwest’s point-to-point network means a Phoenix delay is simultaneously a Dallas Love Field delay, a Las Vegas delay, a Denver delay. A Miami delay is simultaneously a Nashville delay, an Atlanta delay. No airline in the system has less ability to absorb simultaneous two-hub disruption than Southwest.
The no-interline rule at PHX and MIA today: If your Southwest flight is cancelled at Phoenix or Miami, you cannot be automatically rebooked onto American, Delta or United. Cash refund available if timing is unacceptable.
Frontier Airlines saw a 7% cancellation rate at MIA β aircraft and crews unable to cycle back to Denver hub, spreading the travel chaos across the Eastern Seaboard.
Post-Spirit, Frontier is absorbing displaced passengers on former Spirit routes at both Phoenix and Miami. Higher loads + summer heat + 42-day accumulated positioning debt = Frontier’s worst single operational day since it became the primary ULCC at these airports.
SkyWest operates as United Express, American Eagle, and Alaska Alliance at Phoenix. SkyWest Airlines is among the most affected carriers nationally today. SkyWest’s PHX regional operations connect Tucson, Flagstaff, Yuma, and other Arizona communities to the PHX mainline network. A SkyWest cancellation at PHX means an Arizonan community loses its air connection for the day.
Turkish Airlines, TAP Air Portugal, Air Europa, and Royal Air Maroc all reported delays on their Miami services today.
The FAA’s O’Hare summer cap takes effect on May 17 β reducing O’Hare from 3,080 to 2,708 daily operations. The direct beneficiaries: United and American, who will have fewer over-scheduled O’Hare rotations feeding late inbounds into their downstream networks.
For Phoenix specifically: American’s PHX operation depends heavily on O’Hare-originated aircraft flying Phoenix connections. Dallas, Chicago and other major hubs are key cascade sources for Phoenix’s disruptions. Every O’Hare departure that is removed by the cap is an aircraft that will not arrive late at Phoenix from Chicago. That reduction in late inbounds gives American’s PHX operation meaningful recovery capacity from May 17.
For Miami: The O’Hare cascade reaches MIA via American’s ChicagoβMiami and Southwest’s Chicago MidwayβMiami services. The cap reduces that cascade pressure β but Miami’s specific Spirit-displacement surge is not addressed by the O’Hare cap. That structural issue will persist through summer.
The Memorial Day complication: Memorial Day (May 25) is 13 days away. The FAA cap activates 5 days before Memorial Day. Airlines are simultaneously adjusting pre-cap schedules AND preparing for the highest single demand day of the year. The week of May 17β25 is the most complex scheduling transition the US aviation system has navigated in decades.
Action for Memorial Day travellers: If you are flying through Phoenix or Miami over Memorial Day weekend, today’s disruption is your warning. Build a 2-hour buffer into all connection windows. Do not book same-day connections at either airport during May 22β26. Consider alternative routing through airports less exposed to the transitional disruption.
Every cancelled flight at PHX or MIA today triggers an unconditional right to a full cash refund within 7 business days. Airlines cannot insist on a voucher regardless of the cause.
“I am requesting a full cash refund to my original payment method under DOT regulations.”
If refused: file at airconsumer.dot.gov.
For delays caused by crew shortage, scheduling failure, aircraft positioning β not weather: β Meal vouchers at 3+ hour controllable delays β ask immediately, keep receipts β Hotel for controllable overnight stays β ask airline to arrange; if they fail, book and keep receipt β Rebooking on next available flight β American, United, Delta will rebook on partner carriers; Southwest will not
At Phoenix: British Airways PHXβLHR β if delayed 3+ hours at Heathrow for controllable reasons: β¬600 per passenger (EU261 applies to European carriers departing US airports).
At Miami: TAP Air Portugal, Air Europa, Aer Lingus β same rule. β¬600 per passenger for 3+ hour controllable delays.
Ask at the gate for the specific reason for your delay in writing. Crew shortage = controllable = EU261 applies.
Travellers bound for Toronto and SΓ£o Paulo faced overnight layovers in Miami. If your overnight at MIA was caused by an airline-controllable delay, your airline must arrange hotel accommodation and transport. Ask at the American, Air Canada, or LATAM desk at MIA tonight.
If the airline cannot arrange accommodation: book independently, keep the receipt, and submit with written documentation that airline-arranged accommodation was unavailable.
DOT has no EU261 equivalent for domestic delays. Only cancellations trigger the mandatory cash refund. Extended delays produce duty of care (controllable only) β not automatic cash payments.
Chase Sapphire and Amex Platinum: up to $500 per person for delays of 6+ hours. File independently from airline duty of care claims. Keep all food, transport and accommodation receipts from the moment of confirmed delay.
1. Track your inbound aircraft on FlightAware before leaving for the airport. If the inbound is running late from Dallas, Chicago, or Atlanta, your departure is late regardless of what the board shows.
2. Use the airline app β not the gate queue. On a 314-disruption day at Phoenix and 234-disruption day at Miami, gate desk queues are 60β90 minutes. The app processes rebooking faster.
3. At 3+ hours controllable delay: ask for meal vouchers immediately. Go to the airline desk. Say: “My flight has been delayed over three hours. I am requesting meal vouchers under your DOT customer service commitment.” Keep every receipt.
4. If cancelled: request cash refund β not voucher. The airline’s default is rebooking or credit. Say specifically: “I am requesting a full cash refund to my original payment method under DOT regulations.”
5. If you are connecting internationally at MIA: call your airline NOW. If your domestic inbound to Miami is running late and you have an international departure tonight, call the airline from your origin city. Ask for protection on the next available international service before you even arrive at MIA. Availability fills faster once you are in the building.
6. Build a 2-hour buffer for Memorial Day. If you have Memorial Day weekend travel through Phoenix or Miami β book it today as if today’s disruption is the baseline. It may be worse on May 24β26.
| Airline | Fastest action | Phone |
|---|---|---|
| American Airlines | aa.com β My Trips | 1-800-433-7300 |
| Southwest | southwest.com β Change/Cancel | 1-800-435-9792 |
| United | united.com β My Trips | 1-800-864-8331 |
| Frontier | flyfrontier.com β My Trips | 1-801-401-9000 |
| SkyWest passengers | Contact United/American/Delta/Alaska | Do NOT call SkyWest |
| British Airways (PHX) | ba.com β Manage My Booking / EU261 | 1-800-247-9297 |
| TAP Air Portugal (MIA) | flytap.com β My Booking / EU261 | 1-888-235-7587 |
| Air Canada (PHX + MIA) | aircanada.com β Manage Bookings | 1-888-247-2262 |
| LATAM (MIA) | latamairlines.com β My Trips | 1-866-435-9526 |
Phoenix Sky Harbor live status: skyharbor.com β Flight Status Miami International live status: miami-airport.com β Flight Info FlightAware: flightaware.com β Search PHX or MIA FAA NAS status: nasstatus.faa.gov DOT consumer complaint: airconsumer.dot.gov EU261 claims: airhelp.com Β· flightright.eu
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Posted By : Vinay
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