Qatar Airways Adjusts Flight Schedule
Qatar Airways has introduced a revised limited schedule for flights to and from Hamad International Airport in Doha, which will be in effect until 28 March. The airline announced on its website that the temporary schedule aims to reconnect the Qatari capital with more than 70 destinations across Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and the Pacific.
The updated schedule is designed to offer greater flexibility for passengers who wish to travel. According to the airline, bookings are now open for these routes. However, the ongoing conflict between the US-Israel and Iran has significantly disrupted air travel across the Middle East and Gulf region. This conflict has led to widespread airspace closures and operational challenges for airlines.
Key aviation corridors linking Europe, Asia, and Africa have been shut or restricted, forcing carriers to cancel flights or reroute aircraft on longer, more costly paths. Major hubs such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi have also faced direct disruptions, including drone incidents near airports. In addition, surging jet fuel prices and heightened safety concerns have exacerbated the crisis, leaving hundreds of thousands of passengers stranded worldwide.
British Airways Extends Regional Cancellations
British Airways has extended its temporary reduction in flights to destinations across the Middle East and Gulf. Previously, the airline had announced that all flights to and from Amman, Bahrain, Doha, Dubai, and Tel Aviv were cancelled until later in March. Services to and from Abu Dhabi were also cancelled “until later this year.”
In a new update, BA confirmed that flights to Amman, Bahrain, Dubai, and Tel Aviv were now cancelled up to and including 31 May, and flights to Doha were cancelled until 30 April. Due to “airspace instability,” BA is “keeping the situation under constant review” and is “directly in touch with affected customers to offer them a range of options.”
Airlines Issue Updates to Middle East Schedules
Lufthansa Group
The Lufthansa Group, which includes Lufthansa, SWISS International Air Lines, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, ITA Airways, and Eurowings, has suspended flights to and from several key locations. These include Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Amman, and Erbil until 28 March; Tel Aviv until 9 April; Beirut until 28 March; and Tehran until 30 April. Flights to and from Riyadh have also been suspended until 5 April for “operational reasons.”
Gulf Air
Gulf Air has expanded temporary operations from King Fahd International Airport in Dammam, Saudi Arabia, due to the closure of Bahraini airspace. The national carrier has introduced a limited programme of special flights from Dammam to major international destinations, including Frankfurt, Nairobi, London, Mumbai, and Bangkok, for travel up to and including 28 March.
Air India
Air India has announced additional flights to destinations in Europe and North America. Between 19-28 March, it will operate 36 extra flights on the following routes: Delhi-London; Mumbai-London; Delhi-Frankfurt; Delhi-Zurich; and Delhi-Toronto. These flights will add 10,012 seats on the five routes, further boosting capacity and providing more choice to travelers when travel options remain limited.
Oman Air
Oman Air continues to operate as normal, but some routes remain temporarily affected. Flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad, and Khasab are cancelled until 31 March.
IndiGo
Indian low-cost carrier IndiGo has suspended planned flights to several Middle East destinations until 28 March. The airline said services to Doha, Kuwait City, Bahrain, Dammam, Fujairah, Ras Al Khaimah, and Sharjah will remain suspended. Due to the “evolving situation” in the Middle East, IndiGo’s flight operations in Dubai have also been “further restricted.”
Philippine Airlines
Philippine Airlines has temporarily suspended several Middle East routes until 28 March. The airline has halted flights between Manila and Riyadh, Dubai, and Doha. An additional Doha-Manila flight scheduled for 29 March has also been cancelled.
Etihad Airways
Etihad Airways has restarted a “limited flight schedule” operating from its hub at Zayed International Airport in Abu Dhabi. The airline has listed more than 70 destinations that it planned to fly to between 6 and 19 March.
Air Arabia
Air Arabia has started operating a limited number of flights to and from the UAE, subject to operational and regulatory approvals. From 6–22 March, limited flights will be operating between Sharjah, Abu Dhabi, and Ras Al Khaimah to more than 40 destinations.
Virgin Atlantic
Virgin Atlantic’s seasonal Dubai service is now suspended for the remainder of the winter. The airline’s flights to Riyadh have also paused for the next two weeks and will “continue to be assessed on an ongoing basis in line with the latest safety guidance.”
Wizz Air
Low-cost carrier Wizz Air has suspended flights to Israel until 29 March and to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Amman, and Jeddah from mainland European destinations until the middle of September.
Turkish Airlines
Turkish Airlines has cancelled flights to and from Bahrain, Dammam, and Riyadh (Saudi Arabia), Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Syria, and the UAE.
Air France
Air France is “monitoring the evolving situation in the region in real-time,” but due to the closure of certain airspaces, it has been forced to extend the suspension of its flights to and from Dubai and Riyadh until 20 March inclusive, and to and from Tel Aviv and Beirut until 21 March inclusive.
KLM
Dutch airline KLM is currently not flying through the airspace of Iran, Iraq, and Israel, nor over several countries in the Gulf region. Flights to, from, or via destinations in the region are cancelled or adjusted. KLM’s Tel Aviv flights are suspended for the remainder of its winter season operations, while flights to and from Dammam, Riyadh, and Dubai are suspended up to and including Saturday 28 March.
Air Canada
Air Canada has said that all flights to and from Dubai and Tel Aviv are currently suspended and restarting on 23 March.
Garuda Indonesia
Garuda Indonesia, Indonesia’s flag carrier, temporarily suspended flights to and from Doha “until further notice,” the company said in a statement.






