A strong 7.6-magnitude quake hit near Japan’s northeast shore on December 8, 2025, setting off tsunami alerts leading to disruptions in flights across the region. Despite those warnings being canceled the next day, major airports saw tons of delayed or scrapped departures. This chaos left many travelers stuck, unable to move as schedules fell apart overnight.
Aomori Nebuta Festival © Kodai Monma
The Impact on Major Airports
The quake’s center sat about 73 km from Misawa in Aomori Prefecture, disrupting flights at local airports including Aomori and Misawa. Though no serious building harm showed up, officials paused air travel due to safety checks and fears of more tremors. The trouble spread further as airports such as Tokyo Haneda, Osaka Kansai, and Sapporo New Chitose saw growing delays on arriving and departing routes.
Aomori Prefecture has a few local airports that help people move around up north. As quakes are an everyday occurrence in Japan, flight rules kick in fast.
Tokyo Haneda Airport © Mos Desig
Airline Responses and Passenger Experiences
All Nippon Airways (ANA) along with Japan Airlines (JAL), set up adjusted procedures for impacted flight paths. These changes allowed easier rescheduling on trips to or from Aomori and Misawa on the 9th and 10th of December, no matter if flights were officially scrapped. Travelers noticed longer delays and packed waiting areas at airports, while a few called things messy due to worries about tremors after quakes.
ANA and JAL, run wide routes across Japan and beyond. This means they’ve dealt with lots of earthquakes and storms, their quick reaction plans cut down extra delays.
A ANA plane jetting through the sky © Fasyah Halim
Japan’s airports handled the Dec 8 quake pretty well – looks like lasting harm will be light. To keep up with flight news or travel tips, check out Travel Radar now.

AloJapan.com