594 Flights Canceled, 2,476 Delayed Across Asia — Doha, Dubai, Delhi Worst Hit

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🚨 Quick Summary — Asia Flight Disruptions, March 14, 2026
- • 594 cancellations and 2,476 delays recorded across 12 major Asian airports today
- • Hamad International Airport (Doha) leads cancellations with 287 flights cut — the single highest figure of any airport on the continent today
- • Indira Gandhi International Airport (Delhi) leads delays with 448, followed by Kuala Lumpur (375), Mumbai (294), and Bangkok (304)
- • Qatar Airways has cancelled 274 flights — by far the most of any carrier; IndiGo follows with 85 cancellations and 245 delays
- • Countries affected: Qatar, UAE, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, India, and China
Thousands of travelers are stranded or facing multi-hour waits across Asia today as a continent-wide wave of flight disruptions has produced 594 cancellations and 2,476 delays spanning 12 major international airports across seven countries. The affected network stretches from Doha and Dubai in the Middle East through Delhi and Mumbai in South Asia to Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, and Chengdu in Southeast Asia and China, according to data compiled from FlightAware and individual airport authorities.
The scale and geographic spread of today's disruptions make this one of the most significant single-day disruptions to Asia's aviation network recorded in recent months. Qatar Airways, IndiGo, Air India, Gulf Air, FlyDubai, Etihad Airways, Malaysia Airlines, and AirAsia are among the carriers most severely impacted, while Emirates, Singapore Airlines, Thai Airways, and Sichuan Airlines are recording elevated delay figures across their respective hubs.
Airport-by-Airport Breakdown: 12 Hubs Under Pressure
Hamad International Airport, Doha — 287 Cancellations, 12 Delays
Hamad International Airport is recording the highest cancellation count of any airport in Asia today with 287 flights cut from its schedule. Qatar Airways accounts for the large majority of those cancellations. Gulf Air, IndiGo, Malaysia Airlines, and Royal Jordanian have also had services cancelled through the Doha hub, creating a serious backlog for transit passengers connecting onward to Europe, Africa, and Southeast Asia.
Dubai International Airport — 119 Cancellations, 188 Delays
Dubai International Airport has recorded 119 cancellations and 188 delays. FlyDubai is the worst-affected carrier at the Dubai hub in terms of combined disruptions. IndiGo, Air India, Gulf Air, and Qatar Airways have also reported cancellations out of Dubai. Emirates — the airport's largest operator by volume — has logged significant delays but no cancellations today, suggesting the airline is absorbing disruption through schedule stretching rather than cuts.
Indira Gandhi International Airport, Delhi — 27 Cancellations, 448 Delays
Delhi's Indira Gandhi International Airport records the highest delay total of any airport in today's disruption with 448 delayed flights. Air India and IndiGo together account for the majority of both cancellations and delays at Delhi. SpiceJet, Air India Express, Akasa Air, and Corendon Airlines have each contributed additional disruptions. Delhi's combination of high traffic volume and sensitivity to knock-on delays from Middle East disruptions makes it particularly exposed when the Gulf airline network contracts.
Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport, Mumbai — 40 Cancellations, 294 Delays
Mumbai is today's second-most disrupted Indian hub with 40 cancellations and 294 delays. IndiGo and Air India drive the largest share. SpiceJet, Akasa Air, and Gulf Air have all contributed additional cancellations at the Mumbai hub.
Kuala Lumpur International Airport — 5 Cancellations, 375 Delays
Kuala Lumpur International Airport is among the most severely delay-affected hubs in Southeast Asia with 375 delayed flights. AirAsia dominates the delay count at KLIA, consistent with its role as the airport's highest-frequency operator. Malaysia Airlines has reported both cancellations and delays. Malindo Air, AirAsia X, Firefly, and XiamenAir are also experiencing disrupted operations.
Suvarnabhumi Bangkok International Airport — 11 Cancellations, 304 Delays
Suvarnabhumi is one of Southeast Asia's four worst-affected airports today with 304 delays and 11 cancellations. Thai Airways, Thai Vietjet Air, Bangkok Airways, Qatar Airways, and Etihad Airways have all logged disruptions at the Thai capital's main international gateway.
Singapore Changi Airport — 5 Cancellations, 168 Delays
Singapore Changi Airport has recorded 5 cancellations and 168 delays. Singapore Airlines and Scoot together account for the largest share of delays. Gulf Air, Qatar Airways, and Etihad Airways are among the carriers registering cancellations through Changi, affecting a range of regional and long-haul international services.
Abu Dhabi International Airport — 53 Cancellations, 59 Delays
Abu Dhabi International Airport logs 53 cancellations and 59 delays today. IndiGo has recorded the highest cancellation count at the airport, while Etihad Airways accounts for the majority of delays. Gulf Air, Qatar Airways, and EgyptAir have also contributed to Abu Dhabi's disruption total.
Sharjah International Airport — 17 Cancellations, 61 Delays
At Sharjah, Air Arabia is the primary source of delays, while cancellations span IndiGo, Qatar Airways, SpiceJet, EgyptAir, and Pegasus Airlines — highlighting how the disruption crosses carrier models from full-service to ultra-low-cost.
Phuket International Airport — 6 Cancellations, 125 Delays
Phuket's international airport records 6 cancellations and 125 delays, adding to Thailand's total disruption alongside Bangkok's more severe figures.
Chengdu Tianfu International Airport — 14 Cancellations, 231 Delays
In China, Chengdu Tianfu reports 14 cancellations and 231 delays today. Sichuan Airlines, Air China, and other regional Chinese carriers have logged disruptions at one of Sichuan province's two major gateways.
Chongqing Jiangbei International Airport — 10 Cancellations, 211 Delays
Chongqing Jiangbei records 10 cancellations and 211 delays, extending the China-side disruptions to a second major southwestern hub. Shenzhen Airlines, China Eastern, and regional operators are among those affected.
Full Airport Summary
| Airport | City / Country | Cancellations | Delays |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hamad International (DOH) | Doha, Qatar | 287 | 12 |
| Dubai International (DXB) | Dubai, UAE | 119 | 188 |
| Abu Dhabi International (AUH) | Abu Dhabi, UAE | 53 | 59 |
| Sharjah International (SHJ) | Sharjah, UAE | 17 | 61 |
| Indira Gandhi International (DEL) | Delhi, India | 27 | 448 |
| Chhatrapati Shivaji International (BOM) | Mumbai, India | 40 | 294 |
| Suvarnabhumi (BKK) | Bangkok, Thailand | 11 | 304 |
| Phuket International (HKT) | Phuket, Thailand | 6 | 125 |
| Kuala Lumpur International (KUL) | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | 5 | 375 |
| Singapore Changi (SIN) | Singapore | 5 | 168 |
| Chengdu Tianfu International (TFU) | Chengdu, China | 14 | 231 |
| Chongqing Jiangbei International (CKG) | Chongqing, China | 10 | 211 |
| TOTAL | 594 | 2,476 |
Airlines Most Affected
| Airline | Cancellations | Delays |
|---|---|---|
| Qatar Airways | 274 | 13 |
| IndiGo | 85 | 245 |
| Air India | 34 | 283 |
| Gulf Air | 33 | — |
| FlyDubai | 29 | 77 |
| Etihad Airways | 15 | 44 |
| Malaysia Airlines | 8 | 55 |
| AirAsia | Elevated | 375+ (KUL share) |
| Emirates | — | Elevated |
| Singapore Airlines | — | Elevated |
| Thai Airways | — | Elevated |
| Sichuan Airlines | Multiple | 231 (TFU share) |
Key Facts at a Glance
- Total Asia cancellations (March 14, 2026): 594
- Total Asia delays (March 14, 2026): 2,476
- Countries affected: Qatar, UAE, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, India, China
- Airport with most cancellations: Hamad International, Doha (287)
- Airport with most delays: Indira Gandhi International, Delhi (448)
- Carrier with most cancellations: Qatar Airways (274)
- Carrier with most total delays: Air India (283) / IndiGo (245)
- Source: FlightAware and individual airport authorities
What This Means for Travelers in Asia Today
The Doha disruption has the broadest knock-on effect. Hamad International serves as one of the world's busiest long-haul transit hubs — connecting passengers across Africa, Europe, South Asia, and Southeast Asia through a single hub. With 287 Qatar Airways cancellations today, passengers booked on multi-segment itineraries through Doha face the most complex rebooking challenges, as alternative options require carrier or routing changes that can take 48–72 hours to resolve at peak disruption levels.
Delhi and Mumbai passengers face a different but equally pressing situation. The combination of 27 and 40 cancellations respectively, alongside 448 and 294 delays, means that India's two busiest airports are running significant schedule backlogs. Passengers connecting onward to domestic Indian destinations from international arrivals should allow extra time and confirm both legs are still operating as scheduled.
In Southeast Asia, Kuala Lumpur's 375 delays — the second-highest delay count of any airport today — are largely being generated by AirAsia's regional network, which has the highest flight frequency at KLIA. Passengers transiting through Kuala Lumpur to onward Southeast Asian or Australian destinations should monitor their connections closely.
What Affected Passengers Should Do Now
Check status immediately via the airline's app. Airport departure boards in high-disruption environments often lag behind real-time data. Your airline's mobile application or official website will reflect schedule changes faster than any third-party tracker.
Rebook early — do not wait at the gate. At airports with triple-digit cancellations (Doha, Dubai, Delhi, Mumbai), the queue at airport customer service counters is likely to extend for hours. Use the airline's online rebooking tool or telephone support line to secure an alternative before arriving at the airport.
Request meal vouchers or accommodation for long waits. Under applicable air passenger protection rules in India, the EU-regulated legs of Qatar Airways and Gulf Air operations, and UAE Civil Aviation Authority guidelines, airlines may be required to provide meals and accommodation for significant delays or cancellations within their control. Ask directly at the counter.
Keep all travel documents accessible. Rapid gate changes, terminal switches, and rebooking queues are more likely today. Keep boarding passes, passports, and booking confirmations easily accessible throughout the terminal.
Consider travel insurance claim documentation. Passengers holding comprehensive travel insurance with trip delay or cancellation coverage should retain all airline communications, new booking confirmations, and expense receipts for potential claims.
FAQ: Asia Flight Disruptions March 14, 2026
Which Asian airport has the most cancellations today?
Hamad International Airport in Doha leads with 287 cancellations — the highest figure of any airport across today's disrupted network. Qatar Airways accounts for the majority of those cuts.
Which airline has cancelled the most flights in Asia today?
Qatar Airways has cancelled 274 flights across Doha, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Bangkok, Phuket, Delhi, and Mumbai — more than three times the count of the next-highest carrier, IndiGo (85 cancellations).
Is Singapore Changi Airport severely affected?
Singapore Changi has recorded 5 cancellations and 168 delays today. While its cancellation number is low relative to Doha and Dubai, the delay figure ranks it above several larger airports, and passengers transiting Changi to onward Southeast Asian destinations should confirm their connections.
What should I do if my Qatar Airways or IndiGo flight is cancelled today?
Contact your airline directly using its app or customer service line as soon as possible. Both carriers are operating under elevated disruption today and alternative seats may fill quickly. Ask specifically about the next available departure and whether the airline will cover accommodation if your connection date changes.
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Disclaimer: Disruption data in this article is sourced from FlightAware and individual airport authorities for March 14, 2026. Flight figures update in real time. Always verify your specific flight status directly with your airline before traveling to the airport.
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