- Flight Disruptions
- Stockholm Arlanda disruption delays 75 flights and cancels 11
Stockholm Arlanda disruption delays 75 flights and cancels 11
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Checked by Josh Arnfield
Last updated on 4 June 2026
86
Affected flights
6
Affected airports
4
Affected airlines
Disruption overview
Operations at Stockholm Arlanda Airport were heavily disrupted on 3 June 2026, with at least 75 flights delayed and 11 canceled during a busy day of travel. The knock-on effect quickly spread beyond Sweden, affecting passengers flying with Norwegian Air Sweden, Scandinavian Airlines, Lufthansa, and KLM.
Routes linked to Frankfurt, Munich, Amsterdam, Brussels, Paris, and London all felt the impact as late inbound aircraft pushed later departures behind schedule. For passengers, that meant missed connections, longer waits, and more complex rebooking. Because the disruption appears to have come from a mix of operational pressure and possible air-traffic-control restrictions, whether compensation applies will depend on the exact cause of your flight problem, but airlines should still help with rebooking, refunds, and essential care.
Passengers affected by this flight disruption may be eligible for compensation of up to £520 under passenger rights regulations. Eligibility depends on the circumstances of the disruption.
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Disruption details
Operations at Stockholm Arlanda Airport were heavily disrupted on 3 June 2026, with at least 75 flights delayed and 11 canceled during a busy weekday schedule. For passengers, that meant longer waits, missed connections, and travel plans that quickly started to come apart.
The disruption built through the morning as aircraft took longer to turn around and departure boards filled with revised times. Because Arlanda is Sweden’s main international gateway and an important transfer point for Norwegian Air Sweden and Scandinavian Airlines, local delays soon spilled onto routes across Germany, Belgium, France, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.
By late afternoon, the ripple effect was already clear:
Flights linked to Frankfurt Airport, Munich Airport, Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, Brussels Airport, Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport, and London were arriving late and leaving late again.
Norwegian Air Sweden and Scandinavian Airlines were among the hardest hit, with disruption on both domestic and intra-European services.
Lufthansa and KLM also saw schedules slip as delayed inbound aircraft pushed later departures deeper into the evening.
Among the main airlines affected, Norwegian Air Sweden saw widespread lateness on core European routes, while Scandinavian Airlines dealt with delays and a handful of cancellations on both domestic Swedish and international flights. Lufthansa and KLM, which connect Stockholm with Frankfurt, Munich, and Amsterdam, were also caught in the same pattern as late arrivals rolled into later departures.
That kind of disruption is hard to recover from when airlines are working with tight rotations. Once one aircraft arrives late, the same delay can carry into the next sector, and evening departures can then edge toward curfews elsewhere in the network.
No single trigger stands out here. Instead, the day appears to have been shaped by a mix of operational pressure, including tight summer schedules across Scandinavia, limited spare aircraft and crew, short-notice technical checks, and temporary air-traffic-control flow restrictions in northern Europe.
When several of those issues hit at once, rolling delays can build faster than airlines can absorb them. That’s especially true at a busy hub like Arlanda, where small setbacks on the ground can quickly turn into wider disruption across several countries.
For affected travelers, the practical impact was often bigger than the delay shown on the board. Some passengers faced missed onward connections, involuntary overnight stays, or complicated rerouting as airlines tried to protect later sectors and reset aircraft positions.
Airlines advised customers to keep checking live flight status and use self-service rebooking tools where possible. By late 3 June, carriers were working to recover aircraft and crew rotations so services could return to a more normal pattern the following morning. The disruption appeared to be limited to that day’s operations, but the impact on individual journeys was still significant.
If your flight was affected, whether compensation applies will depend on what caused your disruption. If airline operational issues were responsible, compensation may be possible. If outside factors, such as air traffic control restrictions, played the bigger role, compensation may be less likely.
Even when compensation isn’t clear, you should still be offered support when your journey is badly disrupted. That can include rerouting or a refund, plus food, drinks, and accommodation if you’re left waiting for hours or overnight. If you want to understand what applies to your trip, you can check your flight with AirHelp for free.
Know your rights
These are your air passenger rights
When your flight's disrupted, you have rights. Most passenger protection laws cover the following:
Compensation
Good passenger rights ensure passengers get fairly compensated for delays and cancellations. Try our compensation check and find out how much money we can get you.
Rerouting or refund
If your flight is canceled, your airline must provide an alternative. Some laws say you can choose a full refund instead.
Food and essential care
Providing food and drinks is a basic right under many regulations. Typically after a delay of a few hours.
Accommodation
Some passenger rights say the airline must provide accommodation when your journey is delayed overnight.
This advice is provided to help you if your flight is delayed or canceled. However, the exact care and compensation you are entitled to will depend on your specific circumstances and flight. Always follow the directions of your airline, particularly with regard to check-in and boarding times.
Quick facts
Summary
Disruption
Delays and Cancellations
Cause
Other
Status
Past disruption
Compensation
May qualify for compensation
Flights affected
86
Airlines affected
Norwegian, SAS Scandinavian Airlines, Lufthansa, KLM-Royal Dutch Airlines
Airports affected
Stockholm Arlanda Airport, Frankfurt am Main Airport, Munich Franz Josef Strauss Airport, Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, Brussels Airport, Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport
Cities affected
Stockholm, Frankfurt, Munich, Amsterdam, Brussels, Paris, London
Countries affected
Sweden, Germany, Belgium, France, Netherlands, United Kingdom
Start date
2026-06-03
Checked by
Josh Arnfield
Date updated
4 June 2026
What to do if your flight is delayed, canceled, or overbooked
If you're traveling to, from, or within the European Union, here's what you should do when you experience a disruption.
Gather evidence that your flight was delayed, cancelled, or overbooked.
Get the airline to provide written confirmation of the disruption and the reason behind it.
Request an alternative flight to your destination — or a refund if you no longer wish to travel.
Make a note of the arrival time at your final destination.
Ask the airline to provide vouchers for meals and refreshments.
Avoid signing documents or accepting offers that may waive your passenger rights.
If an overnight stay is required, ask the airline to provide accommodation.
Save receipts for any additional expenses caused by the disruption.

