(NEWARK, NEW JERSEY) United Airlines is backing a fresh FAA extension of flight limits at Newark Liberty International Airport, saying the tighter planning is the best way to bring steady service back to one of the country’s busiest hubs. The Federal Aviation Administration confirmed it will keep flight restrictions in place from October 26, 2025, through October 24, 2026, while raising the hourly cap slightly from 68 to 72 operations—still below the pre-2023 pace of more than 80 flights per hour.
United CEO Scott Kirby called the move “essential for long-term operational reliability and customer experience,” arguing that Newark’s schedule must match what the airport and air traffic system can actually support.

Why United supports the extension
Kirby emphasized that the policy is about safety and honesty with travelers. Newark Liberty International Airport has struggled with:
- communications and radar outages,
- long-term shortages in air traffic control staffing across the New York region,
- and operational fragility during peak periods.
He said the reduction in operations, combined with continued technology upgrades and ATC staffing increases, are “critical milestones toward Newark’s long-term operational certainty.” He also described the FAA’s action as a “structural change needed to really put Newark on a level footing with LaGuardia and JFK.”
The FAA’s order came after consultations with airlines and the airport operator; both supported the plan to extend and slightly raise the flight rate. The agency also cited weekend construction closures on Runway 4L-22R that will continue through the end of 2025, which limit flexibility during peak travel periods.
What the new limits mean at Newark
Under the FAA extension, Newark’s hourly cap is set at 72 total operations. For travelers and airlines this implies:
- Schedules built to a more realistic level, helping reduce late-day congestion and missed connections.
- Greater day-to-day predictability rather than high peaks that are hard to recover from after an outage or weather event.
- Short-term reduction in available flights during the busiest hours in exchange for improved on-time performance.
United—Newark’s largest carrier—expects reliability gains through 2026 as system upgrades and staffing efforts continue. Earlier in 2025 the airline cut about 35 daily roundtrip flights to ease pressure and keep schedules closer to plan.
Technology and staffing progress
The FAA highlighted recent improvements, including:
- a new fiber optic communications network linking New York and Philadelphia TRACON facilities,
- controller staffing improvements: 22 fully certified controllers and five certified supervisors now assigned to the relevant unit.
While modest relative to regional demand, these gains reflect progress after years of shortages and reduce the odds of a communications cascade.
With the cap held below the old 80-plus flights per hour, the FAA is being cautious until the system proves it can handle higher throughput.
Human impact and travel planning
Travelers who use Newark for long-haul links (South Asia, Europe, Latin America) remember previous waves of cancellations tied to outages and staffing gaps. When weather or radar failures occurred, a thin schedule margin made recovery slow.
By keeping flight restrictions in place and raising the cap only slightly, the FAA aims for a day that bends, not breaks.
Practical steps for passengers:
- Book longer connection buffers at Newark, especially for afternoon and evening arrivals when delays can stack.
- If you have a time-bound immigration or reporting step (visa interview, school start date, job reporting), consider arriving a day earlier.
- Monitor airline travel alerts and accept free rebooking to morning flights when offered — mornings tend to be more reliable.
- Keep digital copies of visa documents, I-20s, DS-2019s, or advance parole in your carry-on so you can recheck quickly if rebooked.
- For official operational updates, check the Federal Aviation Administration: https://www.faa.gov
These steps are especially relevant for F-1 students, H-1B employees, lawful permanent residents on limited travel windows, and anyone with time-sensitive immigration or reporting obligations.
Operational and regional implications
United’s stance signals a shift from chasing maximum hourly throughput to prioritizing predictable service. Newark lies within the country’s most complex airspace; when many aircraft push the same runway and airspace limits, one failure can ripple across the network.
The ongoing Runway 4L-22R weekend closures through 2025 reduce runway capacity and impede quick recovery after weather or outages. That reality makes the FAA’s extension both a safety measure and a buffer against daylong meltdowns.
Comparisons with the other New York airports:
- LaGuardia and JFK face similar constraints but have schedules more closely managed to realistic throughput.
- Kirby’s “level footing” comment aims for fairness across the three airports so Newark does not become the weak link.
VisaVerge.com notes that capacity-driven scheduling helps protect international arrivals, who may face added border steps and higher risk of missed connections on separate tickets. Tighter caps can especially assist first-time visitors and new residents unfamiliar with transfers and recheck rules after U.S. customs.
Airlines, trade-offs, and the year ahead
The caps force carriers to make choices about scarce slots. United’s early 2025 cuts were intended to preserve hub structure while trimming peak-driven delays. Other airlines will similarly balance Newark access against on-time performance and aircraft utilization.
For travelers, the trade-off this year is:
- fewer choices at the busiest hours,
- but a better chance the flight you book will depart close to schedule.
If you have critical appointments—green card interviews, biometrics, consular visits—the safer approach is to fly into Newark the day before. Families traveling on B-2 visas for events like weddings or graduations should also consider earlier arrivals while flight restrictions remain.
United expects steady gains into 2026 as staffing and technology improve. The FAA will monitor performance and may revisit caps once runway work ends and controller staffing supports more flights.
For now: hold the line at 72 operations per hour, continue system upgrades, and aim for a travel day that runs smoother than Newark’s prior peaks-and-pain cycle.
This Article in a Nutshell
The FAA will keep flight restrictions at Newark Liberty International Airport from October 26, 2025, to October 24, 2026, raising the hourly operations cap from 68 to 72. United Airlines supports the extension as necessary to restore predictable service following communications and radar outages, long-standing air traffic controller shortages, and ongoing weekend runway construction on Runway 4L-22R. The FAA cited improvements including a new fiber-optic communications link and 22 certified controllers plus five supervisors assigned to the unit. The measure aims to reduce late-day congestion and missed connections by favoring steady, recoverable schedules over high peak throughput, with reliability expected to improve through 2026.