Thousands more flights have been delayed or cancelled as the reduction of air travel capacity continues during the federal government shutdown.

Controllers already have missed one full paycheck and are scheduled to again receive nothing next week as the shutdown drags on.

Experts predict hundreds if not thousands of flights could be canceled.

As the shutdown cancels even more flights, lawmakers are under increasing pressure to reach a deal.

The Federal Aviation Administration announced a reduction across 40 airports beginning Friday. Here's what travelers need to know.

FAA is reducing 10% of flights at the following airports to lessen pressure on air traffic controllers amid shutdown

Travelers across the United States are bracing for major disruption, with airlines ordered to cut flights by up to 10% amid a government shutdown that has left thousands of…

Experts predict hundreds if not thousands of flights could be canceled at dozens of major airports

By late Thursday over 800 flights within and in and out of the U.S. had already been canceled for Friday

Airlines had already started cutting services ahead of today’s 6am ET directive to reduce traffic at 40 major airports

Travellers forced to adjust their plans as longest shutdown on record continues with no sign of a resolution

At least 1,000 flights were called off nationwide Friday — four times the number canceled Thursday, according to FlightAware, a website that tracks flight disruptions.

The cuts will increase gradually over the next week, as air traffic controllers go without pay during the ongoing government shutdown.

The cuts were ordered as air traffic controllers have missed their paychecks due to the government shutdown, now the longest in U.S. history.

Airlines scrambled to adjust their schedules and began canceling flights Thursday in anticipation of the FAA's official order.

Flights have been cancelled or delayed, impacting 40 major US airports

Over 1,000 U.S. flights cancelled amid government shutdown, affecting major airports and travelers nationwide as budget standoff continues.

Friday marked the first day of flight cuts mandated by the US government at 40 of the nation's airports

WASHINGTON: US airlines and travelers slogged through a second day of flight cuts across the country on Saturday as the government shutdown was expected to drive more cancelations…

Airlines will have to slash hundreds of more flights if shutdown continues into next week.

More than 1,150 flights were canceled on Nov. 8 as an emergency order to cut thousands of flights in response to the shutdown kicks in.