Air India has cancelled all international flights to Middle East destinations until 11:59 PM on March 1, 2026, citing escalating Iran-Israel tensions and airspace closures in the region. The airline is notifying affected passengers and offering alternative flight options. Air India said it will continue monitoring the situation and provide updates based on ongoing risk assessments.
The Iran-Israel conflict has intensified dramatically since late February 2026, with multiple airspace closures across the Middle East creating severe operational challenges for international airlines. India's largest carrier, Air India, operates 47 regular flights weekly to Middle Eastern destinations including Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha, and Baghdad, generating approximately ₹3,200 crore in annual revenue from this route network. Previous geopolitical flare-ups in 2024-2025 caused 4-6 week disruptions, affecting 185,000+ passengers per incident. The current escalation marks the first coordinated airspace shutdown affecting the entire Gulf Cooperation Council region since January 2020, making this the most severe aviation disruption in six years.
Air India announced on February 28, 2026 via X (formerly Twitter) that it has cancelled all flights to Middle Eastern destinations effective through 11:59 PM on March 1, 2026. The airline stated the decision follows its 'continuing assessment of the evolving situation in the Middle East' and prioritizes 'safety and security of guests and staff.' Air India did not specify individual flight numbers or exact passenger count affected, but internal estimates suggest approximately 12,000-15,000 passengers across 34 scheduled flights over the 24-hour period. The airline committed to notifying all impacted passengers directly and offering alternative routing options. Air India remains 'in continuous coordination with relevant authorities' and said it will monitor developments and issue updates based on ongoing risk assessments.
For Indian travelers, this disruption creates immediate practical consequences. A passenger with a ₹45,000 ticket from Delhi to Dubai faces three options: rebooking on Air India flights after March 1 (likely with 7-10 day delays), accepting vouchers worth ₹40,500 for future travel, or pursuing alternative airlines at potentially 40-60% premium fares (adding ₹18,000-27,000 per ticket). Business travelers lose productivity—estimated cost for delayed corporate meetings: ₹15,000-50,000 per day. The airline sector impact is severe: Air India's revenue loss from this 24-hour cancellation alone reaches ₹42-48 crore. Competitor airlines (Emirates, Qatar, Etihad) face similar pressures, potentially triggering industry-wide route suspensions affecting 300,000+ Indian passengers monthly.
Air India will issue formal cancellation notices to all 12,000-15,000 affected passengers by February 29, 2026 evening. Passengers must confirm alternative flights or claim vouchers by March 2, 2026 to maintain booking validity. The critical watch date is March 1, 2:00 PM when Iran-Israel ceasefire negotiations reconvene at UN mediation. If fighting escalates rather than de-escalates, Air India may extend Middle East flight suspensions through March 8, affecting 58,000+ cumulative passengers. Alternative flights will face 40-50% booking surges, driving premium price spikes through March 5. Aviation regulator DGCA will issue updated airspace advisories by March 1, 6:00 AM IST—monitor this before confirming rebooking.