US Flight Chaos June 12, 2026: LaGuardia 110 Cancellations + 211 Delays — Severe Thunderstorms Trigger Ground Stop — Newark Liberty 32 Cancellations + 211 Delays Simultaneously — United, American, Delta, JetBlue, Endeavor, Republic, Mesa, Jazz, Frontier & Southwest All Hit — New York, Chicago, Boston, Toronto, Montreal Routes Broken — Day 73 — Complete DOT Rights Guide

Published on : 12 Jun 2026

US Flight Chaos June 12, 2026: LaGuardia 110 Cancellations + 211 Delays — Severe Thunderstorms Trigger Ground Stop — Newark Liberty 32 Cancellations + 211 Delays Simultaneously — United, American, Delta, JetBlue, Endeavor, Republic, Mesa, Jazz, Frontier & Southwest All Hit — New York, Chicago, Boston, Toronto, Montreal Routes Broken — Day 73 — Complete DOT Rights Guide

LaGuardia Airport records 110 cancellations and 211 delays on June 12, 2026 — Day 73 of the sustained North American aviation crisis. Severe thunderstorms are the primary trigger today, forcing a FAA Ground Stop at LaGuardia that physically halted all departures during peak morning operations. United Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, Endeavor Air, Republic Airways, Mesa Airlines, Jazz Airlines, Frontier Airlines, and Southwest Airlines are all disrupted. Routes broken: New York, Chicago, Boston, Miami, Toronto, Montreal, Nashville, Raleigh, Richmond, Norfolk, Dallas, and Atlanta. Simultaneously, Newark Liberty International Airport is recording 211 delays and 32 cancellations — its own severe thunderstorm ground stop active. The combined New York metro area disruption on Day 73 is the most severe single-event disruption to the northeast corridor since the crisis began. The thunderstorm cause fundamentally changes passenger rights: DOT refund rights remain UNCONDITIONAL. But EU261/UK261 financial compensation for European-connecting passengers is significantly complicated by the extraordinary circumstances defence.

LaGuardia Airport descended into complete operational chaos on June 12 as severe thunderstorms swept across the New York metro area during the morning peak. The storm system — a line of severe convective weather tracking northeast across New Jersey and into New York City — forced the FAA to issue a ground stop at LaGuardia, physically preventing all departures for a period that created the cascading delay backlog now reflected in today’s 110 cancellations and 211 delays.

The timing of this storm system is operationally catastrophic. June 12 is the second day of the FIFA World Cup 2026, and LaGuardia is one of three New York-area airports handling the World Cup’s opening-week fan traffic. World Cup fans departing New York for US host cities — and international visitors arriving into the region from overseas — are landing directly in the middle of a ground stop event at an airport that was already carrying 73 days of unresolved positioning debt before the first thunderclap.

Simultaneously — and this is the element that makes today’s New York crisis exceptional — Newark Liberty International Airport is experiencing significant travel disruptions today with 211 delays and 32 cancellations. A ground stop has temporarily halted departures at Newark, while a ground delay has increased average wait times significantly. The disruptions at Newark are also primarily due to severe thunderstorms in the region. Two of the three New York-area major airports are simultaneously under severe disruption. JFK is the only New York metro airport not currently reporting a ground stop — but it is absorbing significant diversion and rerouting pressure from both LGA and EWR.


Published: Friday 12 June 2026
Primary Disruption Airport: LaGuardia (LGA) — Queens, New York City
LGA Total Disruptions: 321 (211 delays + 110 cancellations)
LGA Cancellations: 110 — LaGuardia’s highest single-day cancellation count of the 2026 crisis
LGA Delays: 211
Cause: Severe thunderstorms — FAA Ground Stop active at LGA during morning peak
Secondary Disruption Airport: Newark Liberty International (EWR)
EWR Total Disruptions: 243 (211 delays + 32 cancellations)
EWR Cause: Severe thunderstorms — FAA Ground Stop active at EWR
Day in Crisis: Day 73
Carriers Disrupted at LGA: United Airlines · American Airlines · Delta Air Lines · JetBlue · Endeavor Air · Republic Airways · Mesa Airlines · Jazz Airlines · Frontier Airlines · Southwest Airlines
Carrier with Highest % Disruption: Smaller regional hubs — Burlington (BTV) 50% cancellation rate · Worcester (ORH) 100% cancellation rate
NYC Metro Combined Disruption Today: 564 total (LGA 321 + EWR 243)
Domestic Routes Broken: Chicago O’Hare + Midway · Boston Logan · Miami · Nashville · Raleigh-Durham · Richmond · Norfolk · Dallas Love Field + DFW · Atlanta
Canada Routes Broken: Toronto Pearson (YYZ) — 4 delays + 1 cancellation · Montreal Trudeau (YUL) — 3 delays + 1 cancellation
International exposure (EWR): Glasgow (GLA) · Malaga (AGP) · Palma de Mallorca (PMI) — full cancellations at EWR today
EU261/UK261 Status: COMPLICATED — thunderstorm at origin airport = potential extraordinary circumstances. Refund/rerouting rights UNCONDITIONAL. Financial compensation: file and let airline + CAA determine
DOT Rule: Full cash refund mandatory — ALL cancellations regardless of cause
Passengers Affected today (LGA + EWR combined): Est. 80,000–120,000
FIFA World Cup context: Day 2 of tournament — NY metro airports handling World Cup fan arrivals and departures


Why Today Is Different — The Thunderstorm Complication

Every article in your 73-day US aviation crisis series has made the same core argument: today’s delays are positioning-driven, not weather, therefore they are controllable, therefore EU261/UK261 compensation applies. June 12 is different. Today you need to read the rights guide carefully before filing any claim.

The disruptions today are primarily caused by severe thunderstorms impacting ground operations and forcing airline adjustments. This is not positioning language. This is a specific meteorological event — a convective storm system over the New York metro area — that the FAA has responded to with ground stops at both LaGuardia and Newark simultaneously.

Why this matters for your compensation rights:

Under EU261 and UK261, airlines are not required to pay the additional financial compensation (€600/£520) if a cancellation or 3+ hour delay was caused by “extraordinary circumstances which could not have been avoided even if all reasonable measures had been taken.” Severe weather events — including thunderstorms that force FAA ground stops — are the clearest example of extraordinary circumstances that courts consistently recognise.

What this means in practice today:

Right Status Today Reason
Full cash refund (cancelled flights) UNCONDITIONAL DOT rule — applies regardless of cause
Free rerouting UNCONDITIONAL DOT/UK261/EU261 — applies regardless of cause
Meals and refreshments (2+ hour wait) UNCONDITIONAL DOT/UK261 duty of care — applies regardless
Hotel if overnight required UNCONDITIONAL DOT/UK261 duty of care — applies regardless
£520/€600 financial compensation ⚠️ COMPLICATED Thunderstorm at origin = potential extraordinary circumstances
£220/€250 financial compensation ⚠️ COMPLICATED Same — file and let the authority assess

The nuance you need to know:

Just because a thunderstorm caused the original LGA/EWR ground stop does not automatically mean every disruption today is extraordinary circumstances. Courts and aviation authorities examine the specific causal chain. If your flight was delayed not because of the thunderstorm directly, but because:

  • Your aircraft was displaced from a position caused by yesterday’s (June 11) positioning debt
  • Your crew was out of position from an earlier disruption
  • Your aircraft was on a rotation that originated from a non-weather-affected hub

…then your disruption may still be controllable, and financial compensation may still apply. The burden of proof is on the airline to demonstrate extraordinary circumstances — not on you to disprove it.

Practical guidance: File your claim. Let the Civil Aviation Authority (UK) or your national aviation authority assess whether extraordinary circumstances genuinely applied to your specific flight. Do not assume the thunderstorm defence is valid for your flight simply because thunderstorms occurred at LaGuardia today.


📊 Complete LGA Carrier Breakdown — June 12, 2026

United, American, Delta, JetBlue, Endeavor Air, Republic, Mesa, Jazz, Frontier, and Southwest collectively cancelled 110 flights and delayed 211 flights across the United States and Canada.

Carrier Delays Cancellations Key Routes Hit Notes
Endeavor Air (Delta regional) High High Southeast/Midwest feeders into LGA Contact Delta — not Endeavor
Southwest Airlines High Moderate MDW · DAL · BNA · MCI · BWI Southwest’s LGA → Midway corridor hardest hit
Delta Air Lines Elevated Moderate ATL · DTW · BOS · MSP · MIA Delta regional feeds through Endeavor
Republic Airways (United/AA Express) High High EWR · ORD · BOS · DCA feeders Contact United or American — not Republic
American Airlines Elevated Moderate ORD · MIA · DFW · DCA · BOS AA’s LGA–Chicago + Boston corridors
JetBlue Elevated Low BOS · FLL · MCO · Long Beach Northeast corridor hardest hit
United Airlines Elevated Low EWR (overflow) · ORD · IAH United’s LGA footprint smaller than Delta/AA
Mesa Airlines (United Express) Elevated Moderate Small market feeders Contact United — not Mesa
Jazz Airlines (Air Canada Express) Elevated Moderate YYZ · YUL transborder Contact Air Canada — not Jazz
Frontier Airlines Moderate Low DEN · MCO · leisure routes Budget leisure — full cancellation rights apply

🔴 LaGuardia — The Northeast Corridor Crisis Hub

The breakdown wasn’t a single failure — it was a cascading operational failure. Regional airports bore disproportionate pain. Patrick Leahy Burlington (BTV) suffered a staggering 50% cancellation rate, while Worcester Regional (ORH) saw 100% of its LaGuardia flights terminated.

This regional concentration effect is LaGuardia’s specific failure mode. Because LGA handles a disproportionate share of short-haul Northeast Corridor flying — flights under 500 miles to Boston, Washington, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Buffalo, Burlington, Albany, and Worcester — a ground stop at LaGuardia cascades differently than a ground stop at a hub like Atlanta or Dallas. At those hubs, disrupted passengers can be rerouted via alternative hub connections. At LaGuardia, many routes have no meaningful alternative — a Burlington, Vermont passenger who needs to reach LGA on a regional jet simply cannot reroute via Dallas.

The bleeding didn’t stop at LaGuardia’s gates. Montreal-Trudeau (YUL) absorbed three delays (27% of traffic) and one cancellation. Toronto Pearson (YYZ) recorded four additional delays, creating a dual-hub crisis spanning the Canada-US border. Chicago Midway (MDW), Louis Armstrong New Orleans (MSY), Dallas Love Field (DAL), and Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) all reported cascading delays from LaGuardia’s operational collapse.


🔴 Newark Liberty — Simultaneous Ground Stop: Day 73’s Second Crisis

Newark Liberty International Airport is experiencing significant travel disruptions today, with flights to multiple domestic, Canadian, and international destinations encountering delays and cancellations. Major US routes to Chicago O’Hare report 4 delays and 5 cancellations, while Toronto Pearson has 3 delays and 2 cancellations. Smaller airports including LaGuardia and Nantucket Memorial reported half of their flights cancelled. International destinations including Glasgow (GLA), Malaga (AGP), Palma de Mallorca (PMI), and Jackson Hole (JAC) experienced full cancellations. The disruptions at Newark are primarily due to severe thunderstorms in the region. A ground stop has temporarily halted departures, while a ground delay has increased average wait times significantly.

Newark’s simultaneous crisis is significant because it removes the standard rerouting alternative for LGA passengers. On a normal disruption day, LGA passengers are typically rerouted via EWR or JFK. Today EWR is itself under a ground stop. JFK — the only New York metro airport without a current ground stop — is the only viable rerouting hub in the region, and its capacity is being consumed by diversion and rerouting pressure from both LGA and EWR simultaneously.

International passengers at Newark today — Glasgow, Malaga, Palma de Mallorca: International destinations such as Glasgow (GLA), Malaga (AGP), Palma de Mallorca (PMI), and Jackson Hole (JAC) experienced full cancellations. Passengers booked on EWR–GLA (typically United or British Airways codeshare), EWR–AGP, and EWR–PMI (note: Air Canada launched the first North American direct to Palma last week from Montreal — but EWR Palma connections via European carriers are affected today) should contact their carrier immediately. Full refund or rerouting unconditionally. Financial compensation: file and allow the authority to assess.


📊 New York Metro Area — Day 73 Combined Disruption Picture

Airport Delays Cancellations Combined Ground Stop Status
LaGuardia (LGA) 211 110 321 ✅ Active Thunderstorm — primary crisis
Newark Liberty (EWR) 211 32 243 ✅ Active Thunderstorm — simultaneous
JFK (John F. Kennedy) Elevated Low ❌ No ground stop Absorbing diversion pressure
NYC Metro Combined 422+ 142+ 564+ Most disrupted metro in US today

The combined 564+ total disruptions across LGA and EWR makes the New York metro area by far the most disrupted aviation region in the United States today. For context: on Atlanta’s worst Day 34 (May 4), that single airport recorded 364 total disruptions. Today the New York metro is recording 564 across two airports simultaneously — a figure that reflects both the severity of the weather event and the 73 days of structural positioning debt that the thunderstorm has landed on top of.


📊 LaGuardia’s 2026 Disruption Pattern — Day 73 Context

Date Delays Cancellations Total Primary Cause
May 31, 2026 210 210+ Delta/Republic/Endeavor/United/Mesa/JetBlue — weather + volume
June 4, 2026 59 1 60 Republic/Delta/Jazz — ATC congestion + crew constraints
June 8, 2026 200+ 23 223+ Republic/American — operational cascade
June 9, 2026 112 7 119 Endeavor/Southwest/Delta/United/Jazz/Air Canada
June 12 (today — Day 73) 211 110 321 Severe thunderstorms — FAA Ground Stop — HIGHEST 2026 CANCELLATION COUNT

Today’s 110 cancellations is LaGuardia’s highest single-day cancellation count in the entire 2026 crisis — significantly above the previous peaks of 23 (June 8) and 7 (June 9). The thunderstorm cause explains the spike: airlines cancel proactively ahead of weather events rather than running late departures into a deteriorating storm system, producing a higher cancellation count and a different delay profile than positioning-only disruption days.


✅ Complete DOT Passenger Rights Guide — LGA + EWR June 12, 2026

The Critical Legal Point for Today

Today’s disruption has a weather cause. This changes the rights picture compared to the positioning-driven days that have dominated this 73-day series. Read carefully before filing claims.

Cancellations — DOT Cash Refund: UNCONDITIONAL (All 142 LGA + EWR Cancellations)

Under US DOT rules (April 2024): every cancelled flight is entitled to a full cash refund to your original payment method within 7 business days for credit cards — regardless of the cause. Thunderstorm. Positioning. Crew failure. It does not matter. The refund right is unconditional.

At any LGA or EWR desk or airline app today: “My flight [number] has been cancelled. Under US DOT regulations I am requesting a full cash refund to my original payment method — not a voucher, not miles, not a travel credit. Please confirm this in writing.”

Or: Free rebooking on the next available service at no fare difference. Your choice.

Delays — Meal Vouchers: CONDITIONAL Today

Under the DOT passenger commitment framework, airlines must provide meal vouchers for controllable 3+ hour delays. Thunderstorm-driven delays may be classified as uncontrollable — meaning airlines have grounds to decline meal vouchers for weather-delay passengers today. However:

  • If your delay is 3+ hours and the airline has not cited weather specifically for your flight
  • If your delay reason reads “operational delay” or “positioning” rather than “weather”
  • If your delay started before the thunderstorm system reached New York

…then controllable-cause meal voucher rights still apply. Ask at the gate. If declined, ask for the specific reason code in writing.

EU261/UK261 — International Passengers: COMPLICATED

For passengers connecting through LGA or EWR to European final destinations (Glasgow, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Palma de Mallorca) who arrive 3+ hours late:

File the claim anyway. Here is why:

  1. Airlines frequently over-apply the extraordinary circumstances defence — citing weather for delays that were actually caused by positioning debt from the previous 72 days
  2. The burden of proof is on the airline to demonstrate that the extraordinary circumstances directly caused your specific delay
  3. The CAA (UK) and national aviation authorities regularly overturn airline refusals where the causal chain between weather and delay is not clearly established
  4. Filing costs you nothing if you use a no-win-no-fee service like airhelp.com or bott.co.uk

When you file, note:

  • The exact reason code on your delay notification
  • The time the FAA ground stop was active at LGA/EWR
  • The time your flight was disrupted
  • Whether your aircraft originated from a non-weather-affected hub

If your aircraft originated in Chicago, Atlanta, or Dallas — where there was no thunderstorm — and was already delayed before it reached New York, the extraordinary circumstances defence may not apply to your specific disruption.

Endeavor / Republic / Mesa / Jazz Passengers

Contact the mainline carrier:

  • Endeavor Air → Delta Airlines (1-800-221-1212)
  • Republic Airways → United Airlines (1-800-864-8331) or American Airlines (1-800-433-7300)
  • Mesa Airlines → United Airlines (1-800-864-8331)
  • Jazz Airlines → Air Canada (1-888-247-2262)

Credit Card Chargeback

If any carrier refuses DOT-mandated cash refund: file chargeback under Fair Credit Billing Act immediately. “Services not rendered.” Simultaneously file at aviation.consumer.complaints@dot.gov.


The JFK Alternative Today

With LGA under ground stop and EWR under simultaneous ground stop, JFK is the only functioning New York metro airport today. Passengers who can reach JFK — either by rerouting or by arranging ground transport from LGA/EWR — should check JFK departure availability:

  • From LaGuardia to JFK: Approximately 45–60 minutes by taxi/Uber ($35–55). Allow surge pricing.
  • From Newark to JFK: Approximately 60–90 minutes by taxi/Uber ($65–85). Allow surge pricing and tunnel/bridge traffic.
  • AirTrain JFK from Jamaica station (LIRR connection) — operating normally today

Airlines operating from JFK include Delta (Terminal 4), American (Terminal 8), JetBlue (Terminal 5), British Airways (Terminal 7), and most international carriers. JFK departures are elevated above normal today as rerouting pressure builds — check availability early.


Navigating New York Metro Airports Today — Practical Guide

At LaGuardia:

  • Gates A, B, C, D across two terminal complexes — check airline app for terminal confirmation
  • Ground stop creates extreme counter congestion — use airline app ONLY for rebooking today
  • Rideshare and taxi at Arrivals level — expect 60–90 minute wait and heavy surge pricing
  • Allow minimum 3 hours for any LGA journey today

At Newark Liberty:

  • Terminal A (United Express), Terminal B (United, JetBlue, Southwest), Terminal C (United international)
  • AirTrain Newark to Newark Penn Station (NJ Transit/Amtrak) — running normally
  • Ground stop creates same counter chaos — United and American apps exclusively
  • Amtrak from Newark Penn to New York Penn (10 min) available if rerouting to JFK

Regional passengers (Burlington, Worcester, Albany, Providence): If your regional connection to LGA is cancelled today, your options are limited. Your mainline carrier (Delta, United, American) should rebook you on the earliest available service — or offer a full cash refund. Consider whether Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor services can cover your journey faster than waiting for a rebooked flight.


🔑 Complete Resource Directory

Action Contact / Link
FAA NAS Status (ground stops live) nasstatus.faa.gov
FlightAware LGA live flightaware.com/live/airport/KLGA
FlightAware EWR live flightaware.com/live/airport/KEWR
Delta rebooking delta.com · 1-800-221-1212
United Airlines rebooking united.com · 1-800-864-8331
American Airlines rebooking aa.com · 1-800-433-7300
JetBlue rebooking jetblue.com · 1-800-538-2583
Southwest rebooking southwest.com · 1-800-435-9792
Air Canada rebooking (Jazz) aircanada.com · 1-888-247-2262
LGA Airport live status panynj.gov/airports/en/laguardia
EWR Airport live status panynj.gov/airports/en/newark-liberty
JFK Airport live status jfkairport.com
AirTrain JFK airtrainjfk.com
AirTrain Newark airtrainnewark.com
EU261 no-win-no-fee claim airhelp.com
UK261 claim specialist bott.co.uk
DOT complaint (refund refused) aviation.consumer.complaints@dot.gov

Bottom Line

LaGuardia Airport records 110 cancellations and 211 delays on June 12, 2026 — Day 73 of the North American aviation crisis — its highest single-day cancellation count of the entire crisis. Severe thunderstorms forced a FAA Ground Stop at LaGuardia during morning peak operations. United, American, Delta, JetBlue, Endeavor Air, Republic, Mesa, Jazz, Frontier and Southwest are all disrupted. Newark Liberty simultaneously records 32 cancellations and 211 delays under its own thunderstorm ground stop — removing it as an alternative rerouting option. The combined New York metro disruption of 564+ total events is the worst single-day two-airport collapse of the entire 2026 crisis. Routes broken: Chicago, Boston, Miami, Nashville, Raleigh, Richmond, Norfolk, Dallas, Atlanta, Toronto, Montreal, Glasgow, Malaga, and Palma de Mallorca. Today’s thunderstorm cause is critical for your rights: the DOT cash refund right is UNCONDITIONAL for all 142 cancellations — no exceptions, no extraordinary circumstances defence applies to refunds. EU261/UK261 financial compensation is complicated by the weather cause — but file anyway and let the authority assess, as airlines frequently over-apply the extraordinary circumstances defence. [The FAA O’Hare cap is on Day 26. American Airlines is projecting 75 million summer passengers. The FIFA World Cup is on Day 2. Day 73 continues.

Your five-point action plan — LaGuardia + Newark, June 12, 2026:

  1. Use your airline app EXCLUSIVELY — do NOT queue at any counter today. LGA and EWR counter queues are running 3–4 hours on a combined 142-cancellation day. Delta app: delta.com. United: united.com. American: aa.com. JetBlue: jetblue.com. Southwest: southwest.com. Rebook now — before the best available alternative slots fill.
  2. Flight cancelled? Demand a full cash refund to your original payment method under US DOT rules. The thunderstorm cause does NOT affect your refund right — it is unconditional for all 142 cancellations today at LGA and EWR. State: “I am requesting a full cash refund under US DOT regulations — not a voucher.” If refused, file a credit card chargeback under the Fair Credit Billing Act and report to aviation.consumer.complaints@dot.gov simultaneously.
  3. Connecting to Europe from LGA or EWR today? File EU261/UK261 regardless of the weather cause. Airlines over-apply extraordinary circumstances. If your aircraft originated from a non-weather-affected hub, if your delay started before the storm hit, or if your reason code reads “operational” rather than “weather” — your claim has genuine grounds. File at airhelp.com (€600) or bott.co.uk (£520) and let the authority assess.
  4. Endeavor, Republic, Mesa, or Jazz passenger? Contact the mainline carrier only: Endeavor → Delta (1-800-221-1212). Republic → United (1-800-864-8331) or American (1-800-433-7300). Mesa → United. Jazz → Air Canada (1-888-247-2262). The regional operator cannot rebook you on other carriers or process your DOT refund.
  5. Need to reach New York today regardless? JFK is the only New York metro airport without a current ground stop. Taxi from LGA to JFK is approximately 45–60 minutes ($35–55). Check JFK departure availability at your airline before committing — and check the FAA NAS Status for current ground stop duration at LGA and EWR before deciding whether to wait or reroute.

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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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