Thousands of passengers hoping to fly between the UK and Amsterdam have had their flights cancelled or delayed by several hours because of snow and strong winds at Schiphol airport.
The airport authorities are telling passengers: “Due to today’s winter weather on 2 January, flights to and from Schiphol may experience delays or cancellations.”
British Airways, easyJet and KLM have cancelled many of their flights to the Dutch hub on Friday. The Independent calculates that more than 60 flights have been grounded between the UK and Amsterdam, affecting around 7,000 passengers.
Problems began early on Friday morning with two inbound flights diverted to Brussels: KLM from Seoul and Tui from Cape Verde.

KLM, whose main hub is at Amsterdam, has cancelled 32 UK flights so far, including multiple links with Birmingham, London City, Heathrow and Manchester.
In addition, inbound flights to Amsterdam from Bristol, Humberside, Leeds Bradford and Teesside are operating three hours late or more – jeopardising connections for travellers from these locations to destinations worldwide.
KLM is telling passengers to “check your flight updates”. Under air passengers’ rights rules, travellers whose flights are cancelled are entitled to be flown to their destination as soon as possible on any airline, and to be provided with meals and hotels until they get there.
EasyJet has grounded at least 20 flights between the UK and Amsterdam on Friday, including links from Belfast International, Birmingham, Bristol, Edinburgh, Liverpool and Luton. Three of the day’s six round-trips between Manchester and Amsterdam have been axed.
A spokesperson for easyJet says: “Due to adverse weather conditions in Amsterdam resulting in air-traffic control restrictions, all airlines are being asked to reduce their flying programme to and from Amsterdam today. As a result some easyJet flights have been delayed or unable to operate today.
“Whilst this is outside of our control, we are sorry for the inconvenience caused. We are doing all possible to support customers, offering a refund or free flight transfer, securing hotel accommodation where possible and advising those making their own arrangements for alternative travel and hotel accommodation on how they can be reimbursed.”
British Airways has so far cancelled a return flight from each of Heathrow and London City to Amsterdam.
Many other European airlines have cancelled flights from their main hubs to Amsterdam, including Air France, Austrian Airlines, Finnair, Lufthansa, SAS and Swiss.
Read more: What rights do you have to compensation for cancelled or delayed flights?
British Airways cuts business class breakfast from eight routes
Simon Calder’s best and worst flights of the year
Passengers claim grandmother who died on easyJet flight ‘looked dead’ while boarding
US airlines ranked for water safety — and there’s a warning for coffee drinkers
Criminal group used a motorhome to steal from tourists in Spain