Drone Sighting Shuts Munich Airport for One Hour
Munich Airport suspended all flight operations for approximately one hour on Saturday morning, May 30, after two pilots in separate aircraft reported spotting what appeared to be a drone near the airfield. Police and airport authorities confirmed the shutdown to AFP. No drone was recovered, no arrests were made, and operations resumed before midday, though significant disruption to the day’s schedule persisted. Al Arabiya
The two pilots reported the suspicious sighting shortly after 9:00 a.m. local time. “In coordination with German air traffic control, the security authorities then decided to close the runways,” a police spokesman said. Al Arabiya
Take-offs and landings were halted shortly after 9:00 a.m. but the alert was lifted at around 10:15 a.m., a spokesman for the airport said. A separate airport spokesman told Reuters that flights were able to resume at 10:05 a.m. Yahoo!
Stefan Bayer, a spokesperson for Germany’s Federal Police, confirmed that all activity on both runways had stopped and that a large number of police officers had been deployed to the scene. A police helicopter was deployed and security personnel were assigned to clarify the situation. Despite the scale of the response, the search came up empty. “An extensive search by emergency services found no threat” to public safety, an airport spokesman said. Ukrainska Pravda + 2
The disruption cascaded quickly through the morning schedule. During the shutdown, more than 20 flights that had been due to land at Munich were diverted to other airports, an airport spokesperson said. By mid-morning, Munich Airport had recorded 33 cancelled flights and 114 delays averaging nearly an hour, making it the most disrupted airport in Europe at that point in the day, according to flight tracking data. Global Banking and FinanceEuro Weekly News
Regional and Global Impact
The incident adds to a growing pattern of drone-related closures at European airports. Munich Airport was already affected by a separate drone disruption in October 2025, when drone sightings on a Thursday evening forced air traffic control to suspend operations, leading to the cancellation of 17 flights and disrupting travel for nearly 3,000 passengers, with 15 arriving flights diverted to Stuttgart, Nuremberg, Vienna, and Frankfurt. That incident came after a series of drone sightings that temporarily shut airports in Denmark and Norway, with Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen suggesting Russia could be responsible. Saturday’s closure at Munich produced no confirmed source for the sighting, and German authorities made no public attribution. aolaol
Munich Airport is Germany’s second-busiest aviation hub. Closures of even one hour at the facility carry outsized knock-on effects for connecting passengers across the continent, particularly on a Saturday morning at the start of a peak summer travel weekend. Athens Times
Background
Drone incursions at major European airports have become a recurring security concern since 2024, forcing authorities to develop rapid-response protocols that prioritise runway closure over continued operations when a sighting is reported. Under those protocols, a single credible pilot report is typically sufficient to trigger a shutdown pending investigation. Germany’s Federal Police coordinated with German Air Traffic Control during Saturday’s response, consistent with standard procedure for suspected airspace violations near civilian airports. The October 2025 Munich incident showed that even unconfirmed sightings can ground dozens of aircraft and strand thousands of passengers before a search is completed. No perpetrator has been publicly identified in any of the recent German airport drone incidents. Global Banking and Finance
What Happens Next
“Extensive police operations, including a search of the affected area by police helicopter, yielded no results,” a police spokesperson said — leaving the origin and nature of the reported object unresolved. German Federal Police have not announced a formal investigation or identified any suspects. The airport’s departures board showed a mix of ongoing delays and cancellations in the hours following the resumption of operations. Passengers travelling through Munich on Saturday were advised to check their flight status directly with their airlines. No German government official had issued a public statement on the incident as of Saturday afternoon. Global Banking and Finance



