- by foxnews
- 02 Apr 2026
The disruption has begun. United Airlines has cancelled a large number of flights across its U.S. network between 9 November and 11 November 2025. The ripple effect is now threatening tourism in key cities like Houston and San Antonio, where visitors, business travellers and events count on timely flights. For the traveller, the news means uncertainty and change. For local tourism operators it means potential revenue losses.
The disruption has begun. United Airlines has cancelled a large number of flights across its U.S. network between 9 November and 11 November 2025. The ripple effect is now threatening tourism in key cities like Houston and San Antonio, where visitors, business travellers and events count on timely flights. For the traveller, the news means uncertainty and change. For local tourism operators it means potential revenue losses.
Tourism in Houston and San Antonio relies heavily on flight connectivity, especially with incoming leisure travellers and regional business meetings. When flights are cancelled, fewer visitors arrive, fewer nights are booked in hotels, fewer meals eaten in restaurants, fewer tours booked. A recent economic outlook notes that a downturn in travel can hurt a region’s income and jobs.
For Houston and San Antonio, two cities that rely both on domestic business travel and leisure visitors, these cancellations mean fewer people arriving for events, fewer overnight stays, and fewer dollars spent locally. The fact that multiple flights in and out of Houston (IAH) are cancelled means the gateway is compromised.
(Disclaimer: The information provided is sourced from FlightAware and airport websites. We do not guarantee its accuracy and have no intention to harm or malign any airlines. If you notice any discrepancies, please contact us at pr@travelandtourworld.com)
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