Air travel worldwide remains significantly affected as a result of the recent Iran war and the consequent closure of major Middle Eastern air hubs. Airlines across multiple regions have announced cancellations, route suspensions and reduced schedules to destinations including Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi, Riyadh and Tel Aviv. The following provides an airline-by-airline account, organized alphabetically, of current service changes and suspended routes.
AEGEAN AIRLINES - Greece's largest airline has halted flights to Tel Aviv, Beirut and Amman through April 22. Services to Erbil and Baghdad are suspended until May 24. Flights to Dubai will not operate until April 19, and services to Riyadh are cancelled through April 18.
AIRBALTIC - Latvia's airBaltic has cancelled all flights to Tel Aviv through April 29. The carrier has also suspended all services to Dubai until October 24.
AIR CANADA - The Canadian flag carrier has cancelled every flight to Tel Aviv until May 2. Its services to Dubai are suspended until April 30.
AIR EUROPA - The Spanish airline has cancelled all scheduled flights to Tel Aviv up to April 10.
AIR FRANCE KLM - Air France has cancelled flights to Tel Aviv and Beirut until April 4, and flights to Dubai and Riyadh through March 31, including an April 1 departure from Dubai that is affected. KLM has suspended flights to Riyadh, Dammam and Dubai until May 17, and has cancelled services to Tel Aviv until April 11.
CATHAY PACIFIC - The Hong Kong carrier has cancelled all passenger flights to Dubai and Riyadh until May 31. To respond to elevated demand for travel to Europe, Cathay Pacific plans to operate three additional return flights to Paris and Zurich, and to add seats on 13 existing flights to London in April.
DELTA - The U.S. carrier has cancelled its New York-Tel Aviv service and pushed back the restart of its Atlanta-Tel Aviv route until September 5. Delta's Boston-Tel Aviv service has been delayed with no new restart date announced.
EL AL ISRAEL AIRLINES - The Israeli flag carrier reported that customers scheduled to depart Israel through April 4 had their flights cancelled, including corresponding return flights. The airline is continuing to operate a limited number of services to a selection of key destinations.
EMIRATES - Emirates said it is operating a reduced flight schedule following a partial reopening of regional airspace.
ETIHAD AIRWAYS - Etihad has indicated it is operating a limited commercial flight schedule between Abu Dhabi and selected destinations.
FINNAIR - The Finnish carrier has cancelled flights to Dubai until March 29 and to Doha until July 2. Finnair additionally continues to avoid the airspace of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Israel.
FLYNAS - Saudi budget carrier Flynas extended suspensions of flights to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Doha, Bahrain, Kuwait, Iraq and Syria until March 31.
IAG - IAG-owned British Airways extended cancellations to Amman, Bahrain, Dubai and Tel Aviv through May 31, with cancellations to Doha through April 30. The carrier has also added flights to Bangkok and Singapore. Flights to Abu Dhabi remain suspended until later this year.
INDIGO - The Indian airline has suspended operations to Doha, Kuwait, Bahrain, Dammam, Fujairah, Ras Al Khaimah and Sharjah through March 28.
JAPAN AIRLINES - Japan Airlines has suspended its scheduled Tokyo-Doha flights until April 10, and Doha-Tokyo services through April 11.
LOT - The Polish carrier stated that all of its flights to Dubai are cancelled until March 28 and to Tel Aviv until May 31. It has also cancelled services to Riyadh until April 30 and to Beirut from March 31 through April 30.
LUFTHANSA GROUP - The Lufthansa Group, including Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, ITA Airways and Edelweiss, has suspended flights to Dubai and Tel Aviv until May 31. The group has also suspended services to Abu Dhabi, Amman, Beirut, Dammam, Riyadh, Erbil, Muscat and Tehran until October 24. Lufthansa Cargo has applied the same suspensions, except that its Tel Aviv suspension will last through April 30. Low-cost carrier Eurowings plans to suspend flights to Tel Aviv, Beirut and Erbil through April 30 and to Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Amman through October 24.
MALAYSIA AIRLINES - Malaysia's carrier has suspended all flights to Doha until April 15.
NORWEGIAN AIR - The low-cost carrier has postponed planned launches of its Tel Aviv and Beirut services to June 15, from previously scheduled April 1 and April 4 dates. Norwegian has cancelled all Dubai flights through April 8.
PEGASUS - Turkey's Pegasus Airlines has cancelled flights to Iran, Iraq, Amman, Beirut, Kuwait, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah through April 13. Its flights to Riyadh are cancelled until April 1.
QATAR AIRWAYS - Qatar Airways said it would operate a revised, limited number of flights until March 28.
SINGAPORE AIRLINES - Singapore Airlines extended suspension of Singapore-Dubai flights until April 30. The carrier is adding services on the Singapore-London Gatwick and Singapore-Melbourne routes from late March through October 24 to address higher demand on those routes.
TURKISH AIRLINES - Turkish Airlines has cancelled most of its Middle East flights through the end of March. SunExpress, the Turkish-Lufthansa joint venture, has cancelled flights to Dubai until April 6 and to Bahrain until April 30.
WIZZ AIR - The low-cost carrier has suspended flights to Israel through March 29. It has also suspended flights from mainland European destinations to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Amman and Jeddah through mid-September.
These network interruptions span a broad set of carriers and routes, reflecting both temporary airspace closures and airline decisions to suspend operations to certain destinations. Several carriers have reallocated capacity or delayed route restarts, while others have extended suspensions into late spring and, in some cases, into October.
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The scope and duration of service disruptions vary considerably by carrier. Some airlines have cancelled services for only a few days, while others have extended suspensions into late spring or beyond, and a small number have adjusted capacity by adding flights on alternative long-haul routes to meet shifting demand.
Passengers affected by these cancellations are encountering a mix of full route suspensions, delayed restarts and reduced schedules. The measures taken by airlines include operating a reduced schedule from partial reopening of airspace, avoiding specific national airspaces entirely, and reassigning capacity to markets where demand has increased.
As developments continue, carriers have published their own notices and timetables for suspended services. The evolving situation remains subject to further adjustment depending on the status of regional airspace and carrier network decisions.