
Starting 26 October, Cathay Pacific has upgraded its Hong Kong–Riyadh service from four weekly rotations to a daily Airbus A350 flight. The move comes less than a year after the carrier inaugurated the route and reflects a sharp rise in premium demand tied to growing China-Gulf trade and the Belt and Road Initiative.
Business-class load factors have averaged 85 percent since March, according to industry data, with corporations in energy, construction and finance driving traffic. Cathay says the A350’s flat-bed cabins and onboard Wi-Fi were critical in winning market share from Gulf rivals.
For global-mobility teams, the daily frequency cuts layover times and improves same-week relocation planning for executives shuttling between Saudi mega-projects such as NEOM and headquarters in Hong Kong or Shenzhen. Cargo capacity also rises, benefiting high-value shipments such as semiconductor equipment exported from the Greater Bay Area.
The schedule complements visa-free entry that Hong Kong passport holders secured to the UAE and eased rules for Oman earlier this year, making multi-stop Gulf itineraries smoother. Travel managers should note that premium-economy allotments are already constrained on peak days; advanced booking is advised.
Cathay hinted that Kuwait City may be its next Gulf destination as Hong Kong pushes for a free-trade agreement with the GCC.
Business-class load factors have averaged 85 percent since March, according to industry data, with corporations in energy, construction and finance driving traffic. Cathay says the A350’s flat-bed cabins and onboard Wi-Fi were critical in winning market share from Gulf rivals.
For global-mobility teams, the daily frequency cuts layover times and improves same-week relocation planning for executives shuttling between Saudi mega-projects such as NEOM and headquarters in Hong Kong or Shenzhen. Cargo capacity also rises, benefiting high-value shipments such as semiconductor equipment exported from the Greater Bay Area.
The schedule complements visa-free entry that Hong Kong passport holders secured to the UAE and eased rules for Oman earlier this year, making multi-stop Gulf itineraries smoother. Travel managers should note that premium-economy allotments are already constrained on peak days; advanced booking is advised.
Cathay hinted that Kuwait City may be its next Gulf destination as Hong Kong pushes for a free-trade agreement with the GCC.





