Archetyp Links

Dark Mode

Article Details

Cyber ​​attack at BER Airport: There were so many delays and failures on flights

Published on September 24, 2025

Cyber ​​attack at BER Airport: So many delays and failures on flights, BER Airport has been fighting for days with the consequences of a hacker attack.Flight data show how many flights have failed or late and how long travelers actually have to wait.September 24, 2025 at 4:53 p.m. Schönefeld An article by Till Eichenauer Passengers are waiting in a terminal at Berlin Airport.After a hacker attack, everything takes longer.Flights were delayed or fell completely.Carsten Koall/dpa Summary New Airport over days affected by hacker attack-check-in and boarding partly manually. High delays: 129 of 259 flights late on Sunday, Monday 136 of 295, Tuesday 131 of 269. Average delay: Sunday 50 minutes, Monday 65 minutes, Tuesday 58 minutes. Called several flights, e.g.B. Sunday 14, Monday 17, Tuesday 13 - waiting times sometimes considerably. End of the disorders unclear - affected providers continue to work on a solution.The summary was created by artificial intelligence.Was that helpful for you? At BER Airport, not everything runs smoothly five days after the cyber attack.After a company for check-in and boarding has become the victim of a cyber attack, there are still problems on Wednesday (September 24th).The spokesman for the Airport, Dennis Dobrowolski, explains: "We do our best to compensate for manual processes, which usually happens automatically. But there are still delays." The view of the last few days shows how much the travelers had to suffer from the hacker attack-with long waiting times, especially when it comes to baggage and check-in.This in turn caused delays in the departures.On the BER website you can track the planned and actual departure times of the past few days. About half of the departures on BER after cyber attack late On Sunday, for example, 129 flew out of the 259 planned flights.That is more than every second.In addition, 14 flights were completely painted. A similar picture on Monday: 295 flights were planned, 136 of which were late and 17 were not even withdrawn.On Tuesday the same with 269 planned, 131 late and 13 painted flights. The times can also be seen on the website when an aircraft should take off as scheduled and when it actually started.Some travelers had to accept significant waiting times: If you wanted to go to Amsterdam on Sunday, you didn't fly until 9:20 p.m.A flight to Copenhagen on Tuesday only went into the air with 4 hours and 40 minutes late. That was the average delay on BER But the passengers also had to wait a lot on average.On Sunday, the 129 late departures were lifted on average around 50 minutes too late.On Monday, the 136 unpunctual starts were even 65 minutes late and on Tuesday the late 131 planes flew 58 minutes after the plan. Delays continued on Wednesday.According to the website, 169 flights were planned until 3:30 p.m.75 of them have started late.Five flights were canceled. According to the airport spokesman, Dennis Dobrowolski, an end to the failures and delays is not yet foreseeable: "We have heard from the provider concerned that the system is still not available and that it can still take a few days until it is back. We hope that a solution will soon be found."