Loganair has confirmed a significant wave of flight cancellations today (Tuesday 27 January 2026) due to Storm Chandra, with disruption affecting multiple UK regions including Scotland, the Isle of Man and Cornwall.
In an update published by Loganair at 09:05, the airline advised passengers not to travel to the airport if their flight has been cancelled and outlined flexible rebooking options for customers on affected services. The full update is available via Loganair’s official news page:
Cancelled Loganair Flights – Tuesday 27 January 2026
Loganair confirmed the following cancellations for today:
- LM421 (Glasgow – Islay) – 08:00
- LM422 (Islay – Glasgow) – 09:15
- LM443 (Glasgow – Campbeltown) – 08:00
- LM444 (Campbeltown – Glasgow) – 09:15
- LM453 (Glasgow – Tiree) – 08:50
- LM454 (Tiree – Glasgow) – 10:20
- LM693 (Isle of Man – Manchester) – 09:25
- LM693 (Manchester – Newquay) – 10:35
- LM694 (Newquay – Manchester) – 12:35
- LM694 (Manchester – Isle of Man) – 14:20
- LM681 (Isle of Man – Liverpool) – 07:00
- LM682 (Liverpool – Isle of Man) – 08:15
- LM675 (Isle of Man – London Heathrow) – 12:05
- LM676 (London Heathrow – Isle of Man) – 14:40
- LM455 (Glasgow – Barra) – 13:25
- LM456 (Barra – Glasgow) – 15:00
- LM457 (Glasgow – Tiree) – 16:35
- LM458 (Tiree – Glasgow) – 17:55
- LM447 (Glasgow – Campbeltown) – 16:30
- LM448 (Campbeltown – Glasgow) – 17:35
Airports Currently Affected by Weather Disruption
According to Loganair, customers travelling to or from the following airports are currently impacted by the severe weather forecast:
- Barra
- Benbecula
- Campbeltown
- Cornwall Airport Newquay
- Islay
- Isle of Man
- Stornoway
- Tiree
The airline said it intends to operate all remaining scheduled services where conditions allow, with standby aircraft and crews positioned to help recover flights once the weather improves.
Passengers whose flights are cancelled can rebook onto alternative services up to 14 days from their original travel date with no change fee or fare difference, subject to seat availability. Refunds are only available where flights are cancelled.

DM News Commentary
While this update focuses on Loganair, the sheer number of cancellations across multiple airports and regions strongly suggests that wider disruption is likely today across the UK aviation network.
When regional airlines begin cancelling services at this scale, it is usually a clear indicator that other airlines operating into the same airports may also face delays, diversions, or last-minute cancellations as Storm Chandra moves through.
Passengers flying today — especially from exposed regional airports — should check their flight status directly with their airline, monitor airport updates, and allow extra time for knock-on disruption even if their flight is not currently cancelled.
For taxi, private hire and airport transfer drivers, this kind of weather event can also lead to sudden demand changes, delayed pickups, and short-notice cancellations, so flexibility and real-time communication with passengers will be key.
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