Many flights are being cancelled today, but which ones affect you depends on your specific route, airline, and time; you’ll need to check a live flight‑status source for precise details.

What’s being cancelled today

  • Airlines regularly cancel flights for weather , airport restrictions, crew/aircraft availability, and air‑traffic control limits.
  • As of early January 2026, there have been notable waves of cancellations from winter storms in Europe and the U.S., affecting hundreds to over a thousand flights on peak days.
  • Individual airlines (for example Pegasus and others in Europe) have published lists of specific flight numbers cancelled on 12 January 2026 due to adverse weather and airport restrictions.

How to see which flights are cancelled

Because cancellations change minute by minute, the only way to know “which flights are being cancelled” right now is to look at a real‑time tracker or your airline’s status page.

Use these steps:

  1. Go to a live flight‑tracking or cancellation‑statistics site that shows “Cancelled flights” or “Cancellations by airport/airline.”
  1. Filter by:
    • Departure or arrival airport
    • Airline
    • Date / time window
  2. Cross‑check on:
    • Your airline’s own website or app (under “Flight status” or “Travel alerts”).
 * Airport “Arrivals/Departures” board online.

Typical current hotspots

Exact lists shift through the day, but recent patterns include:

  • Major European hubs hit by snow, fog, and wind (for example Berlin, Amsterdam, Paris, Geneva), with multiple short‑haul routes cancelled or heavily delayed.
  • Northeastern U.S. airports experiencing hundreds of cancellations in some winter storms, especially New York–area airports and nearby hubs.

What you should do if you’re flying

  • Check your specific flight number on both a tracker site and your airline’s site or app.
  • Turn on notifications in the airline app and confirm your contact details so you see any last‑minute changes.
  • If your flight shows “cancelled,” look for:
    • Free rebooking or refund options offered in the disruption/travel‑alerts section.
* Alternative airports or later departures that are still operating.

Quick forum‑style perspective

Lots of travelers post that their flight “was always on time” until one day it was just randomly cancelled, often for reasons they never find out about. Cancellations are common, and one day’s cancellation does not mean the route has become unsafe or unreliable overall.

TL;DR: right now there are significant weather‑related cancellations in some regions, but to know exactly which flights are being cancelled you must check a real‑time status source plus your airline or airport’s website for your specific flight.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.