Yes, commercial aircraft can land in snow when runway grip, visibility, wind, and aircraft limits all stay within safe margins.
Snow alone does not cancel a landing. Airliners land in snowy weather every winter at major airports across North America, Europe, and northern Asia. What matters is not the snowflakes in the air. It’s what those flakes do to the runway, the wings, the brakes, and the crew’s view of the runway during the last part of the approach.
That’s why two flights headed into the same storm can get different outcomes. One lands with no drama. Another diverts, holds, or waits for plows and treatment trucks. Pilots, dispatchers, and airport crews are working from measured runway reports, weather data, aircraft performance numbers, and strict company rules. When those pieces line up, the landing can go ahead. When one piece slips outside the limit, the answer changes fast.
What Snow Changes During A Landing
A landing in snow is mostly a braking and control problem. A jet still has lift, power, and navigation help. The trouble starts when the runway surface gets slick or uneven. Loose snow, compacted snow, slush, or ice can cut braking action and reduce tire grip. That affects stopping distance and directional control.
Snow can also cut visibility. If the crew can’t see enough of the runway environment at the required point on the approach, they must go around. Add a gusty crosswind and the workload jumps. Then there’s aircraft contamination. A plane must not take off with frost, ice, or snow stuck to critical surfaces, which is why winter departures often involve deicing and anti-icing treatment. The EASA winter operations overview lays out why even a thin layer of contamination can change aircraft behavior.
On arrival, the crew also cares about runway reports from the airport. Under the FAA’s winter reporting system, airports assess runway condition and issue codes and contaminant details so crews can match landing performance to real runway conditions. The FAA TALPA program explains how runway conditions are assessed and shared with operators.
Can Planes Land When It’s Snowing? In Real Airport Operations
Most of the time, yes. Modern airliners are built for cold-weather flying, and crews train for winter operations. Airports in snowy regions are set up for it too. They plow, sweep, treat pavement, measure conditions, and issue updates throughout the storm.
Still, pilots do not treat all snow the same. Light dry snow with a well-cleared runway is one thing. Wet snow or slush is tougher because it drags on the tires, raises stopping distance, and can hide patches of ice. That’s why a small change in temperature can matter as much as the snowfall rate.
What pilots and airlines check before landing
- Runway condition code and contaminant type
- Reported braking action or runway condition reports
- Crosswind and tailwind limits for the aircraft and company policy
- Visibility and cloud base for the approach in use
- Landing distance needed compared with runway length available
- Go-around and diversion fuel options
- Snow removal progress and runway closure timing
If the numbers work, the crew can continue the approach. If they don’t, the flight may delay, divert, or wait for a cleaner runway. That call is routine, not dramatic. In winter ops, choosing not to land is part of normal risk control.
Why some airports keep moving while others slow down
Airport preparation makes a huge difference. Cities with frequent snow have larger plow fleets, tighter winter procedures, and crews who do this over and over. A few inches of snow at Minneapolis or Oslo may cause less disruption than a lighter event at an airport that rarely sees snow.
Weather type matters too. Dry, blowing snow can be easier to clear than sticky snow near freezing. Freezing rain is worse than plain snow because it can glaze runway surfaces and aircraft quickly. The National Weather Service aviation weather pages show how pilots and dispatch teams track visibility, icing, precipitation, and other hazards tied to flight planning.
| Factor | How It Affects Landing | Typical Result |
|---|---|---|
| Light snow with a cleared runway | Minor visibility hit, little braking penalty | Landing often continues |
| Loose snow on runway | Grip drops and stopping distance grows | Extra landing margin needed |
| Slush | Strong drag, splash, poor braking feel | Higher chance of delay or diversion |
| Ice under snow | Hard to judge true braking action | Runway may close or get treated |
| Low visibility | Crew may lose required runway cues | Approach may stop at minimums |
| Strong crosswind | Directional control gets tougher on touchdown | Limit may be reached sooner |
| Heavy snowfall rate | Runway condition changes between reports | More go-arounds and spacing |
| Cold dry snow at a snow-ready airport | Easier plowing and more stable runway reports | Operations often recover faster |
When Snow Does Stop A Landing
A flight will not land just because the airport is technically open. The crew needs a legal and operational path to touchdown and stop the aircraft within the available runway. Snow can block that path in several ways.
Runway braking is too poor
This is often the big one. Landing distance numbers rise on contaminated runways. If the aircraft cannot meet the required margin for the reported runway condition, the landing cannot continue. That can happen even with a long runway if slush depth, wind, or weight push the numbers the wrong way.
Visibility drops below minimums
Airliners can fly very precise instrument approaches, and some aircraft-airport combinations can do low-visibility autoland operations. Even so, every approach has limits. If the crew reaches the decision point and does not have the required visual references, they go around. Snow showers can cause that in a hurry.
Crosswind reaches the limit
A runway might be usable in pure headwind conditions, then become marginal when gusts swing sideways. Crosswind limits are lower on slick runways than on dry pavement. A snowy runway plus a sharp crosswind is a bad mix for directional control after touchdown.
Snow removal closes the runway
Sometimes the airport chooses a short closure to plow, sweep, and treat the surface. That pause can be the cleanest fix. A twenty-minute closure may prevent a longer mess later.
| Situation | What Usually Happens | Passenger Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Runway still within limits | Flight lands, often with wider spacing | Arrival is late but normal |
| Approach starts, visibility drops | Crew goes around | Another attempt or diversion |
| Runway report worsens | Dispatch and crew reassess landing data | Possible hold or diversion |
| Plows close the runway | Inbound traffic waits or reroutes | Ground delay or alternate airport |
| Crosswind exceeds wet or snowy limit | Approach is not continued | Delay, hold, or diversion |
How Pilots Land Safely In Snow
Winter landings are not about guts. They’re about discipline. Crews brief the runway condition, expected braking, missed-approach plan, and taxi route before they start down. They may carry extra fuel for holding or a diversion if runway reports are changing.
On final approach, pilots fly a stable profile and avoid drifting above speed or below glide path. Touchdown zone matters more on a slick runway because every extra foot flown down the runway eats into stopping distance. After touchdown, pilots use spoilers, brakes, and reverse thrust in a controlled way to keep deceleration smooth and directional control steady.
What passengers notice
From the cabin, a snowy landing may feel firm. That’s not always a bad sign. Crews often want a positive touchdown in the touchdown zone instead of a long float. You may also feel more braking after landing and slower taxi speeds. Those are standard winter habits.
You may wait on the ground after arrival too. Taxiways, gates, and service roads can all slow down in snow. That delay is tied to the same issue as the landing itself: surface conditions matter as much on the ground as they do in the air.
What This Means For Your Flight Plans
If snow is in the forecast, the better question is not “Can planes land?” It’s “Will runway condition and visibility stay inside limits when my flight arrives?” That’s why winter delays can bunch up around a narrow window. A storm does not need to shut an airport for half a day to disrupt the schedule. One hour of poor runway reports can ripple across dozens of flights.
Flights arriving at snow-ready airports still have a strong chance of landing. Flights headed into wet snow, freezing rain, or gusty low-visibility conditions face a rougher path. And late-day arrivals can be more exposed if earlier delays have already stacked the system.
So yes, planes can land when it’s snowing. They do it all the time. They just need the runway, weather, and aircraft limits to agree. When those line up, snow is manageable. When they don’t, the smartest landing is the one the crew refuses to force.
References & Sources
- European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA).“Fighting the Freeze: The Hidden Operations Behind Winter Flights.”Explains how snow, ice, and frost affect aircraft surfaces and runway operations during winter flying.
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).“Takeoff and Landing Performance Assessment (TALPA).”Shows how airports assess and report runway surface conditions for landing and takeoff decisions.
- National Weather Service (NWS).“NWS Aviation Weather Services.”Details the weather products pilots and airlines use to track visibility, icing, snow, and related flight hazards.
