Radio Communications Failure Halts Flights Across Greece: Queues and "Closed Gates" in Athens

On January 4, 2026, air travel across Greece was effectively paralysed by a technical problem that hit a key safety element — communication between air traffic control and aircraft. In Athens Airport, a chain of delays led to huge queues near check-in and security.
Flights across the country were paused after a "radio frequency collapse" disrupted air traffic communications. In other words, the radio system used to manage and coordinate flights failed — and that immediately showed up in the schedule: safety becomes the priority, not the speed of restoring departures.
What’s happening in Athens
In Athens, passengers were stuck in lines at the check-in counters and in the security area. The disruption affected both domestic island routes (for example, Ikaria, Milos, Chios, Kefallonia, Kos) and international departures to cities such as Amsterdam, Milan, Hamburg, Rome, Frankfurt and Düsseldorf.
Why disruptions like this can "stop the skies"
When ATC communications become unstable, the aviation system cannot operate in a "normal mode". Even if an aircraft is technically ready to depart, without reliable control and coordination channels the flight may be restricted or prohibited. The result is usually a cascade effect: delays quickly turn into cancellations, and the growing backlog of passengers fills the terminals.
What passengers should do at the airport
- Check your flight status with the airline, not just the airport screens: app/SMS updates are often faster.
- Join the rebooking queue in parallel: it can be quicker via online chat/call centre than at the desk.
- Ask for written confirmation of a delay/cancellation (or save a screenshot of the status and time).
- Keep receipts for meals/transport/accommodation if you’re spending money because of the wait.
- If you’re stuck in transit, ask about rebooking options and acceptable routes via other hubs.
Compensation and rights: an important nuance
When disruption is linked to external safety restrictions (for example, air traffic control communications issues), cash compensation is not always due, because such cases are often treated as circumstances outside the airline’s control.



















