(CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA, UNITED STATES) Charlotte airport began cutting flights on Friday, November 7, 2025, launching a staged series of FAA-ordered reductions to address a growing shortage of air traffic controllers during the federal government shutdown. The first step is a 4% reduction in scheduled operations, with deeper cuts coming next week that will reach 10% by November 14.
American Airlines, which operates most departures from Charlotte Douglas International Airport, is canceling roughly 30 of its 700 daily flights at CLT and has issued a travel waiver to ease the strain on affected customers as delays and cancellations ripple through its network.

FAA order and staged reductions
The FAA’s emergency order sets targets for Charlotte and other major hubs, requiring airlines to submit daily lists of reduced operations and to step up cuts across several days.
Key steps for Charlotte:
– 4% by Nov. 7
– 6% by Nov. 11
– 8% by Nov. 13
– 10% by Nov. 14
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy described the direction as necessary to reduce pressure on understaffed control facilities:
“Reducing flight schedules 10% at the nation’s 40 busiest airports is necessary for safety.”
What airlines and the airport are doing
Airport officials said they are working closely with federal partners and carriers to manage the slowdown and keep operations as steady as possible while the shutdown continues.
- The airport issued a statement: “CLT continues to stay in close contact with federal and airline partners to remain informed and respond as necessary. While there are currently no major impacts to airport operations, travelers should anticipate possible delays and cancellations.”
- Airlines must submit daily reduction lists to the FAA and choose which flights to preserve, often protecting core connection “bank” structures while trimming less critical frequencies.
American Airlines actions:
– Canceling around 220 flights per day nationwide through Monday to match reduced capacity at key airports.
– In Charlotte, that translates to the roughly 30 daily cancellations noted above, with more possible as FAA limits tighten.
– The carrier issued a travel waiver: customers whose flights are canceled or who choose not to travel may change their flight or request a refund without penalty.
Advice for travelers
Charlotte airport is urging travelers to:
- Check flight status before heading to the terminal.
- Arrive early: at least two hours before domestic flights and three hours before international departures.
- Use the FAA’s official real-time delay portal: FAA Air Traffic Delay Information.
Practical traveler options:
1. Accept fee-free refunds or rebook under the airline waiver (for flexible travelers).
2. Move to earlier departures or nonstop routes that are likelier to be preserved.
3. Add buffer time between connections to reduce risk of misconnecting.
Operational impacts and ripple effects
Even modest percentage cuts at a hub like CLT have outsized operational effects:
- A 4% cut already means dozens of cancellations at a large hub.
- As cuts reach the 10% ceiling, airlines must reshuffle aircraft and crews, which can cause:
- Later aircraft returns to CLT
- Missed crew connections
- Congested rebooking lines and customer service bottlenecks
Analysis from VisaVerge.com suggests staged reductions can lessen sudden network shocks but extend the period of uncertainty for travelers and staff as schedules shift day by day.
Human impacts and local response
The shutdown has reached 37 days, putting visible strain on frontline workers and travelers.
- Crisis Assistance Ministry sent caseworkers to meet with TSA staff and air traffic controllers to help with bills — reflecting hardship among more than 60,000 TSA workers who have missed paychecks.
- Traveler perspective: Ellen Owens said, “We’re just winging it. We don’t know,” as passengers weigh whether to keep bookings or take waivers.
- Performer Rhonda Clark praised frontline staff: “I’m proud of [TSA workers] for still showing up regardless of what is happening. It takes a mindset to be here, to work and not being paid for it.”
Union voices and local leaders have praised the safety focus while warning about fatigue and morale as many continue reporting for duty without pay.
Why controlled cuts are being used
Officials emphasize safety first — the logic behind reducing flight totals:
- Fewer aircraft per sector eases controller workload and lowers error risk.
- Airlines prefer controlled, predictable cuts to rolling delays that can jam aircraft on taxiways and disrupt crew positioning.
- The coordinated approach aims to keep core connections intact while accepting cancellations for less-critical services.
The FAA ties schedule cuts to staffing realities rather than a fixed calendar; the order will remain in place as long as staffing shortages persist during the shutdown.
Near-term timeline and what to watch
Important dates:
– Nov. 11 — move to 6%
– Nov. 13 — move to 8%
– Nov. 14 — move to 10%
If lawmakers reach a deal to end the shutdown, airlines could begin restoring flights, but rebuilding schedules takes time: aircraft and crews need to be repositioned, and passengers affected by cancellations may still face waits for rebooking.
Summary numbers and closing
- Roughly 30 daily cancellations out of 700 departures at CLT at the start.
- About 220 daily cancellations nationwide for American Airlines through Monday.
- The federal government shutdown had reached 37 days as of Friday.
The situation at Charlotte airport illustrates a coordinated effort to maintain safety and system functioning under strain: shorter schedules and fuller flights on the ground, and fewer bottlenecks and safer spacing in the air — at the cost of canceled services and continued hardship for unpaid frontline workers. What happens next depends on Washington, where any resolution could begin the slow process of restoring schedules and paying the people who keep airports moving.
This Article in a Nutshell
Charlotte Douglas Airport began FAA-ordered reductions Nov. 7, starting with a 4% cut and escalating to 10% by Nov. 14 to offset air traffic controller shortages during a 37-day federal shutdown. American Airlines canceled about 30 of 700 daily CLT flights and roughly 220 flights nationwide, offering fee-free changes or refunds. Officials and airlines are coordinating to protect core connections and submit daily reduction lists. Travelers should check status, arrive early, and consider waivers; restoration depends on resolving the shutdown.