American Airlines temporarily grounded flights across the U.S. on Tuesday due to a technical issue, just as the Christmas travel season peaked. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ordered a national ground stop at the airline’s request after a problem emerged with its Flight Operating System (FOS), which manages operations like flight dispatch, planning, passenger boarding, and airplane weight and balance data. The airline attributed the outage to a vendor’s technology.
After about an hour, the FAA lifted the ground stop, allowing flights to resume. However, delays rippled across major hubs, including Dallas-Fort Worth, New York’s Kennedy Airport, and Charlotte, North Carolina. Aviation analytics company Cirium reported that only 37% of America’s 3,901 flights departed on time, with 19 flights canceled.
According to Dennis Tajer, spokesperson for the Allied Pilots Association, pilots were informed of the FOS outage at 7 a.m. Eastern. He noted that while minor issues with system components are not uncommon, a complete outage is rare. Despite the initial disruption, Tajer stated that the situation did not escalate beyond the usual challenges of a busy travel day.
Passengers, however, voiced frustrations on social media about missed connections and inadequate assistance from airline staff. While some flights departed within two hours of their scheduled times, many travelers faced delays.
Flight-tracking service FlightAware noted that 4,058 flights to, from, or within the U.S. were delayed, with 76 cancellations. Of these, 961 delayed flights belonged to American Airlines.
Adding to the challenges, adverse weather, including snow in New York, freezing rain in the Mid-Atlantic, and storms in the South, complicated travel plans.
This disruption highlights the strain of holiday travel and the cascading effects of technical outages, reminiscent of Southwest Airlines’ December 2022 meltdown and Delta Air Lines’ July 2024 system failure caused by a software update issue.
The holiday season also marks the first under new federal regulations requiring airlines to provide automatic cash refunds for canceled or significantly delayed flights, offering some relief to affected passengers.
*(Sources: Associated Press, Cirium, FlightAware)*