A total of 13 flights to and from Dublin Airport have been cancelled today due to a storm on the east coast of the US.
Posting on X, the airport said that "due to adverse weather (Storm Hernando) on the east coast of the US, airlines have cancelled a number of flights due to operate to/from Dublin Airport on Monday".
Dublin Airport said airlines had cancelled seven outbound and six inbound flights so far as a result of the storm.
Passenger Update - Monday 23rd
— Dublin Airport (@DublinAirport) February 22, 2026
Due to adverse weather (Storm Hernando) on the east coast of the US, airlines have cancelled a number of flights due to operate to/from Dublin Airport on Monday.
A total of 13 flights have been cancelled by airlines so far, including 7 outbound… pic.twitter.com/8FZDIlSGAd
It said flights to New York, New Jersey and Boston are affected.
Dublin Airport has advised passengers to contact their airlines for the latest updates.
The Aer Lingus flight to Boston from Shannon Airport, scheduled at 2.45pm this afternoon has also been cancelled.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani declared a state of emergency and ordered non-essential vehicles off city roads until noon, saying plows and emergency crews needed the streets clear as snowfall intensified.
The city is under its first blizzard warning since 2017.
Read more: Powerful winter storm shuts schools, disrupts travel across US northeast