
India’s largest airline, IndiGo, issued a travel alert on 18 December flagging ‘intermittent disruptions’ to flights linking Indian cities with Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah. The warning follows forecasts by the UAE’s National Centre of Meteorology of intense thunderstorms and potential flooding along the Gulf coast.
IndiGo operates more than 90 daily frequencies to the UAE, carrying a mix of business travellers, Indian expatriate workers and winter holiday traffic. Similar alerts from Emirates and Air India Express hint at a broader schedule reset if apron operations are suspended at Dubai International Airport.
If you suddenly need to reroute or obtain new travel documents because of these weather-related schedule shifts, VisaHQ can fast-track Gulf visas and advise on multiple-entry Indian permits within hours. Their online portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) lets travellers and corporate mobility teams upload paperwork, track status in real time and chat with specialists—cutting down the uncertainty that comes with last-minute diversions.
The timing is delicate: year-end demand is peaking, and visa-on-arrival lanes for eligible Indian passport holders are already seeing longer queues after the UAE expanded the facility earlier this year. Travel-management companies advise customers to build in 4-6 hour buffers for onward connections and to secure short-stay travel insurance that covers weather-related delays—something often excluded from corporate policies.
Should severe convection disrupt ground-handling at UAE airports, airlines may divert flights to Muscat or Doha, triggering additional immigration checks for passengers without Gulf Cooperation Council visas. Mobility teams should pre-clear alternative routing permissions and ensure travellers carry multiple-entry Indian visas for seamless re-entry if itineraries change last-minute.
IndiGo operates more than 90 daily frequencies to the UAE, carrying a mix of business travellers, Indian expatriate workers and winter holiday traffic. Similar alerts from Emirates and Air India Express hint at a broader schedule reset if apron operations are suspended at Dubai International Airport.
If you suddenly need to reroute or obtain new travel documents because of these weather-related schedule shifts, VisaHQ can fast-track Gulf visas and advise on multiple-entry Indian permits within hours. Their online portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) lets travellers and corporate mobility teams upload paperwork, track status in real time and chat with specialists—cutting down the uncertainty that comes with last-minute diversions.
The timing is delicate: year-end demand is peaking, and visa-on-arrival lanes for eligible Indian passport holders are already seeing longer queues after the UAE expanded the facility earlier this year. Travel-management companies advise customers to build in 4-6 hour buffers for onward connections and to secure short-stay travel insurance that covers weather-related delays—something often excluded from corporate policies.
Should severe convection disrupt ground-handling at UAE airports, airlines may divert flights to Muscat or Doha, triggering additional immigration checks for passengers without Gulf Cooperation Council visas. Mobility teams should pre-clear alternative routing permissions and ensure travellers carry multiple-entry Indian visas for seamless re-entry if itineraries change last-minute.









