(NEWARK, NEW JERSEY) The FAA proposes to extend flight cuts at Newark Liberty International Airport through October 24, 2026, and it is seeking public feedback now. The agency cites controller shortages, aging equipment, and runway work as reasons for maintaining limits.
Proposed limits and timeline

- Proposed cap: 72 flights per hour from October 26, 2025, to October 24, 2026, outside construction windows.
- Construction weekends (Sept 1–Dec 31, 2025): cap drops to 56 flights per hour.
- Current order: caps operations at 68 flights per hour through October 25, 2025 (and 56/hour during construction).
The FAA frames the proposal as a balance between safety and demand while it hires and trains more controllers and modernizes systems.
Why the extension? Staffing, equipment, and runway work
- The FAA reports it is short about 3,500 air traffic controllers nationwide compared with its target staffing plan.
- The agency plans to hire about 2,000 controllers in 2025, but training takes years and New York airspace is especially complex and hard to staff.
- Runway and technology upgrades are underway: region relies on systems needing replacement or major maintenance, including a multi-year move to fiber optic communications and modern tower/approach-control tools.
- There are reported $5 billion in airport modernization projects in progress, many targeting completion in 2026–2027.
Public comment period
- The FAA opened a one-week comment period, starting August 8–9, 2025, for airlines, the airport authority, workers, and the public to weigh in through the agency’s official public notice process.
- Stakeholders can review the proposal and submit feedback through the FAA’s official public notice page.
- After the comment window closes, the FAA will review submissions and issue a final order. For official updates visit the FAA website at faa.gov, which posts the notice and instructions for public comment.
What this means for travelers
Normal capacity at Newark can exceed 70 flights per hour in good weather. Under the proposal:
- Travelers should expect fewer nonstop choices at peak times, higher ticket demand on popular routes, and greater risk of punctuality problems when weather deteriorates.
- Families may need to:
- Book earlier for peak days and holidays
- Consider off-peak times
- Use nearby airports when prices spike
- Book connections at secondary hubs to find more available seats
Practical tips for travelers:
1. Book early for peak days and holidays.
2. Check nearby airports for better schedules or fares.
3. Choose morning flights, which typically have fewer delays.
4. Build longer layovers to protect connections.
5. Sign up for airline alerts and keep a backup plan.
During construction weekends, expect fuller planes and tighter seating on Friday–Sunday departures.
Effects on airlines and networks
- United Airlines, Newark’s largest operator, estimates about $200 million in annual losses tied to 35 canceled daily roundtrips at the airport.
- United has shifted some flying to other airports, including JFK, increasing competition and scheduling pressure in the New York region.
- Airlines may respond by:
- Upgauging to larger aircraft to carry more passengers within the cap
- Moving flights to JFK or LaGuardia to protect key city-pair markets
- Regional carriers may see demand swings but could benefit from smoother operations if modernization succeeds
Operational context and recent history
- The FAA’s move followed a summer 2025 crunch: staffing gaps at the Philadelphia TRACON (which manages Newark traffic), equipment issues, and runway work triggered daily delays and cancellations.
- A June 2025 order imposed temporary caps to ease congestion. The current proposal continues that strategy, offering a modest boost to 72 flights/hour outside construction while keeping stricter limits during scheduled work.
Analysis and broader impacts
- Aviation analysts say extending caps through October 2026 steadies operations during a period of tight labor and construction, but note extended limits:
- Add costs for airlines
- Inconvenience travelers
- Create near-term revenue headwinds for airlines and infrastructure owners
- If hiring and upgrades progress on schedule, analysts expect recovery potential and eventual return to higher throughput after October 2026.
- VisaVerge.com analysis suggests that measured caps combined with hiring and modernization tend to reduce system-wide ripple delays in congested airspace.
Key facts (at-a-glance)
Item | Detail |
---|---|
Proposed cap | 72 flights/hour (Oct 26, 2025 – Oct 24, 2026, outside construction); 56/hour during construction weekends in late 2025 |
Current cap | 68 flights/hour through Oct 25, 2025; 56/hour during construction |
FAA staffing gap | About 3,500 controllers short |
FAA hiring plan | ~2,000 controllers in 2025 |
Investment | $5 billion in upgrades; many projects slated to finish 2026–2027 |
United Airlines impact | ~$200 million in annual losses tied to 35 canceled roundtrips/day |
Warnings and deadlines
The comment window is short: one week from August 8–9, 2025. Stakeholders can shape the final order by submitting comments, data, and operational evidence focusing on safety outcomes and measurable alternatives.
How stakeholders should comment
- Focus submissions on:
- Safety outcomes
- Operational evidence
- Measurable ways to meet demand without adding risk
- Review the public notice and submit through the FAA’s official docket. For official instructions and the notice, visit the FAA website at faa.gov.
Bottom line
- Short-term: Tight limits continue, meaning fewer flights and potential fare increases or inconvenience.
- Long-term: The goal is safer, more reliable operations once staffing and modernization measures are implemented (potentially restoring capacity after Oct 2026 if all goes to plan).
- The next week matters — comment now if you want to influence the final order.
This Article in a Nutshell