Categories: Travel

Indian Airlines Hit Hard by New Limits, ETTravelWorld


Dubai, Abu Dhabi Airports running limited flights as Middle East Airspace crisis disrupts travel / Image: file

Dubai has restricted foreign airlines to just one daily flight to its airports until May ​31 due to the Iran crisis, igniting revenue loss fears among Indian carriers that had planned more flights than airlines from any other country, letters show.

The Federation of Indian Airlines (FIA), which represents top carriers IndiGo, Air India and SpiceJet, has asked India to push Dubai authorities to lift the curbs and, failing that, to consider reciprocal measures on ‌Dubai carriers including Emirates ⁠and flydubai, ⁠according to a letter it sent to the Indian government on March 31. Indian carriers are already under financial pressure from higher fuel prices and longer routings to Western destinations because they have ​been banned from using Pakistani airspace since last year following military tensions between the two neighbours.

In a private email to airlines on March 27, seen by Reuters, Dubai Airports said carriers would be allowed one round trip per day to Dubai International Airport (DXB), normally the world’s busiest international travel hub, and the smaller Al Maktoum International Airport (DWC) during the summer season between April 20 and May 31, extending restrictions implemented after the war began.

“Carriers continue to be ​limited to one rotation per day, until capacity allows more to be facilitated … Additional slots will be ⁠allocated if ‌capacity is available,” it said.

The FIA told the Indian government the curbs were not being applied to Dubai’s airlines ​such as Emirates and ​flydubai, creating an uneven playing field that could lead to “substantial” revenue losses.

Dubai Airports and Dubai’s media office did ⁠not respond to repeated requests for comment. Flydubai said its flight schedules were approved by the ​relevant authorities. Emirates did not respond to a request for comment.

The measures come after Emirates and ​other Gulf airlines have long complained about India’s bilateral air service agreements that cap the number of seats that can be deployed between countries. Indian authorities have said such pacts protect Indian airlines in the cutthroat market.

INDIAN CARRIERS HARDEST HIT BY CAPS

India was the largest source of passengers for DXB in 2025, with 11.9 million travellers passing through the hub.

The Dubai caps will hit Indian airlines the hardest, according to April and May schedules data from Cirium.

Air India and its budget carrier Air India Express have scheduled more than 750 flights into DXB in that period. IndiGo has 481, followed ‌by Saudia and Gulf Air, which planned for 480 and 404, respectively. India’s SpiceJet had planned 61.

The one-flight-per-day cap would mean 30 or 31 per month for each foreign airline, versus the hundreds of daily flights being flown by Emirates ​and flydubai according ​to Flightradar24 data.

IndiGo told Reuters in a ⁠statement that the Middle East crisis and the new Dubai extended restrictions “significantly constrained” its operations as it had an approved summer schedule of 15 daily flights from India to Dubai.

“As a result, a significant portion of IndiGo’s capacity and aircraft time is currently underutilized,” IndiGo said in its first comments ​on the crisis.

Air India, SpiceJet and Indian authorities did not respond to requests for comment.

Air India Express told Reuters the restrictions had “significantly curtailed” its planned services despite relatively high demand on India-UAE routes, limiting options for travellers, particularly from smaller cities, and underscored the need for a “fair and reciprocal operating framework.” Other major airlines such as Lufthansa, Singapore Airlines, and British Airways had far fewer flights to Dubai than Indian carriers before the crisis began and have cancelled all flights to the city until at least May 31.

They are instead adding more non-stop Asia-Europe flights to take advantage of strong passenger demand that has pushed up prices.

  • Published On Apr 12, 2026 at 02:05 PM IST

Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals.

Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox.

All about ETTravelWorld industry right on your smartphone!






Source link

24timenews.com

Recent Posts

Strait to crisis: Trump orders Hormuz blockade after talks sink

TOI Correspondent from Washington: US President Donald Trump on Sunday announced that the US Navy…

45 minutes ago

Hyundai Ioniq Concepts: Made For China

Hyundai is launching its electric Ioniq brand in China.    It is previewing the lineup…

2 hours ago

Why Ozempic doesn’t work for everyone: Scientists just found a hidden reason

More than one in four people with Type 2 diabetes use GLP-1 receptor agonists, a…

2 hours ago

The 2027 Toyota Land Cruiser Gets One Upgrade It Was Missing

The 2027 Toyota Land Cruiser gains a high air intake. The base 1958 Lan Cruiser…

12 hours ago

Two simple eating habits linked to lower weight, study finds

Maintaining a healthy weight may depend not only on food choices but also on meal…

12 hours ago

Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov fight predictions, start time, odds and undercard

Retirement just can't seem to stick for Tyson Fury. "The Gypsy King" ends his fifth…

22 hours ago