(UNITED STATES) Americans heading home for the holidays are bracing for Thanksgiving flight delays and cancellations in 2025 as an ongoing government shutdown squeezes airport operations and threatens to leave airports flooded with disruptions. Federal officials and airline leaders say the risk will grow by the day if Congress does not restore funding before the peak travel period.
Bookings are already up, aircraft seats are fuller, and the two busiest days of the year—Wednesday, November 26, and Sunday, November 30—are set to push the system to its limit.

Current picture and what’s driving risks
The warning signs are clear:
- Airlines report a 2.2% increase in Thanksgiving bookings compared with last year.
- Carriers have added roughly 250,000 more seats to meet demand.
That means more people at checkpoints, gate areas, and baggage belts—at the same time that key federal services face strain. Aviation analysts note the obvious connection: when the federal workforce is stretched and schedules run tight, small problems can ripple across the country.
House Majority Whip Tom Emmer warned that “airports will be flooded with flight cancellations and delays amid the busiest time to travel all year” if the government shutdown continues. Analysis by VisaVerge.com shows staffing squeezes at security and air traffic facilities are already visible in longer lines and more frequent schedule shuffles, especially at major hubs with tight connection windows.
The contrast with 2024 is stark. Last year, even with record passenger numbers, delays and cancellations stayed low. This year, the shutdown has flipped that trend.
How the shutdown squeezes airport operations
The impact of a prolonged government shutdown shows up in three traveler-facing areas:
- Security — TSA officers often work as “excepted” during shutdowns, but uncertainty, overtime limits, and staffing gaps can slow screening.
- Air traffic flow — Air traffic control staffing and constraints can cause longer taxi times and delayed departures.
- Airport staffing — Reduced or overstretched staff leads to tighter crew schedules and higher cancellation risk when crews time out.
Federal officials and airline executives warn that the closer we get to late November, the harder it will be to absorb shocks. Peak days compress hours, routes, and staff into narrow windows:
- Wednesday, November 26 (day before Thanksgiving) — historically the tightest squeeze.
- Sunday, November 30 (post-Thanksgiving) — often the single busiest travel day; in 2024, more than 3 million travelers passed through security checkpoints that Sunday.
Travel timing matters:
- Morning flights are 57% less likely to be canceled than flights after 9 p.m.
- Thanksgiving Day itself (Thursday, November 27) tends to be quieter and carries the lowest risk of delay or cancellation.
- Black Friday and the Monday/Tuesday of Thanksgiving week are typically calmer than Wednesday and Sunday.
Booking timing and price guidance
Price-conscious families hunting deals should note:
- Best time to book Thanksgiving tickets: 24–59 days before departure, with the lowest fares commonly about 35 days out.
- For Thanksgiving travel, that puts late October in the sweet spot for fares.
- Waiting into November can mean fewer choices and higher prices—especially if the shutdown forces airlines to make last-minute schedule changes.
Real-world impacts and precautions
The human stakes are real:
- A missed connection could mean missing an important family event.
- A canceled flight can turn an affordable trip into a costly scramble for hotels and rebooking fees.
- Staffing pressure can slow checked-bag screening, increasing the chance your luggage misses your flight even if you board.
Aviation analysts urge travelers to build buffers into their plans. Practical steps can reduce stress and financial exposure.
“A few simple choices—earlier departures, calmer travel days, and a backup plan—can be the difference between a smooth trip and a holiday spent waiting at the gate.”
How travelers can reduce risk
Aviation groups and seasoned travelers recommend the following:
- Choose nonstops where possible—fewer connections mean fewer chances for a missed flight.
- Book early morning departures—they are far less likely to be canceled and usually run closer to schedule.
- Avoid peak days if you can—skip Wednesday, November 26, and Sunday, November 30; consider Thanksgiving morning, Black Friday, or the following week.
- Use the airline app—turn on flight alerts, track your aircraft, and rebook yourself immediately if changes occur.
- Pack carry-on only if possible—if a delay hits, you won’t be chasing a checked bag.
- Arrive early—build in extra time for security and gate changes given heavier crowds and thin staffing.
- Check federal advisories before you leave home—TSA posts updates and tips at https://www.tsa.gov/travel.
- Keep travel flexible—free same-day changes or refundable fares can pay off if storms or staffing problems stack up.
Additional tips by traveler type:
- Parents: Pre-select seats together and download airline entertainment so gate changes or long taxis don’t add stress.
- Older travelers: Request wheelchair assistance in advance—busy terminals can mean long walks and limited last-minute support.
- Workers with fixed schedules (nurses, retail staff): If possible, consider leaving Saturday, November 29, or early Monday, December 1 to avoid the worst windows.
Airport choice matters: a regional airport with shorter lines can beat a big hub on a heavy day. If you must connect, avoid tight layovers—a 90-minute connection offers breathing room.
Airline and system responses
Airlines are adjusting to demand—adding seats and tweaking crews and aircraft swaps. With demand up 2.2% and about 250,000 extra seats, carriers are protecting early flights by likely thinning late-day schedules. That approach improves on-time performance for morning departures but raises the risk that the last flights of the day will be canceled if disruptions build.
Community and advocacy concerns:
- Mixed-status and immigrant households face higher stakes when travel disruptions accompany tight itineraries.
- Advocacy groups urge families to carry key documents in hand luggage, save emergency contacts, and plan backup routes—especially when connections route through delay-prone hubs.
Looking ahead: what to expect for December
Thanksgiving is a preview of the winter holidays:
- If the shutdown ends soon, pressure will ease and on-time performance could rebound.
- If it continues, December’s holiday rush will carry the same risks.
For travelers who still need to buy tickets:
- Late October remains a good window for prices, but inventory won’t last long.
- Once November starts, cheapest seats vanish quickly; many families face choices between late-night departures or long layovers.
- Set price alerts and, if possible, act before the final rush.
Day-of-travel tactics and final takeaways
On travel day:
- Monitor your carrier’s travel alerts page and use the airline app to move to an earlier flight if issues are forecast.
- If you must travel on Wednesday or Sunday, consider paying for priority security or bringing only carry-on bags.
- Remember: a morning flight offers your best chance of landing on time.
No one wants a holiday that starts on an airport floor. With demand rising, a government shutdown still in place, and peak days looming, the country’s air system will be under stress. Smart planning won’t solve every problem, but it can keep a delay from turning into a lost holiday.
This Article in a Nutshell
A continuing government shutdown threatens Thanksgiving 2025 air travel, as federal staffing pressures pair with a 2.2% increase in bookings and roughly 250,000 extra airline seats. The combination raises the odds of delays, longer security lines, taxi and departure slowdowns, and cancellations—especially on historically busiest days: Wednesday, Nov. 26, and Sunday, Nov. 30. Morning flights and Thanksgiving Day itself hold lower cancellation risk; travelers are advised to book earlier (24–59 days out, with late October ideal), choose nonstops and early departures, keep bags carry-on only when possible, and enable airline alerts. If funding is restored soon, pressure should ease; if not, December will face similar disruptions.
 
					
 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		