Air travelers may be in for a bumpy week, even as hope grows for an end to the government shutdown.

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.

Analysts warn that the upheaval will intensify and be felt far beyond air travel if the cancellations pick up and move closer to the Thanksgiving holiday.

Americans are in for another day of travel uncertainty as fight delays and cancellations mount across the country.

US lawmakers are working over the weekend as they seek a bipartisan deal to end the shutdown, which is now on day 40.

US senators reach stopgap deal to end government shutdown, raising hopes for end to six-week-long impasse.

Sunday marked the worst day for air travel yet amid the ongoing shutdown, with nearly 3,000 canceled flights nationwide

Travelers continue to face cancellations and delays as shutdown-related flight cuts hit their fourth day.

US airline havoc continues with over 1,700 cancellations and 5,000 delays despite signs shutdown may be ending.

Air travelers may be in for a bumpy week, even as hope grows for an end to the government shutdown.

As of Tuesday, more than 1,100 flights had been canceled, and more than 540 had been delayed

Airlines will need time to adjust schedules even after the shutdown ends, carriers warned.

US airlines cancel 1,200 flights, marking five days of disruptions caused by the prolonged government shutdown.

Thanksgiving travel could be impacted as airlines will need time to retool their flight and staffing schedules once the shutdown ends.

Despite the shutdown nearing an end, experts cautioned that travelers should prepare for further flight disruptions throughout the week.

Even if the House votes to reopen the government, air travelers could see ripple effects from the shutdown for weeks as the nation’s air system recovers.

Flight disruptions eased on Wednesday before House lawmakers were set to vote on a spending bill that would end the longest-ever government shutdown.

After days of widespread flight disruptions triggered by government-mandated cuts and severe weather, air travel is beginning to stabilize.

U.S. airports began Thursday with more flight delays and cancellations, the holdover effects of a 43-day government shutdown that ended overnight.