
A growing list of international carriers is paring back service to the United Arab Emirates only weeks before the winter peak-travel season. On 26 January, Condé Nast Traveler confirmed that Air France, KLM, Lufthansa Group airlines, British Airways, Wizz Air, IndiGo and several North American carriers have either suspended flights or limited operations to daylight hours on routes touching Dubai and Abu Dhabi. The immediate trigger is a European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) Conflict Zone Information Bulletin that urges airlines to avoid Iranian airspace after the United States dispatched a naval strike group to the Gulf.
While Gulf mega-carriers such as Emirates and Etihad continue flying, they are re-routing around the Tehran Flight Information Region, adding 30-90 minutes and higher fuel burn to some rotations. For point-to-point operators the calculus is tougher: KLM has halted services to Dubai, Dammam and Riyadh until further notice, while Lufthansa and Swiss have switched Tel Aviv and Amman sectors to daylight turns to avoid overnight crew lay-overs. Low-cost Wizz Air and IndiGo warn of unexpected tech stops in Cyprus or Greece because of the longer routings.
Corporate mobility teams moving staff through Dubai Hub now face a patchwork of restrictions that change daily. Travellers may discover connections severed at short notice, forcing expensive re-tickets. Employers should monitor the NOTAM feed, work with TMCs to build extra layover buffers and re-check duty-of-care insurance—especially if itineraries transit multiple Gulf gateways.
If rapidly evolving flight schedules leave travelers scrambling for new routings, VisaHQ can smooth at least one variable: documentation. The service’s UAE desk can fast-track visas, flag upcoming policy changes, and courier passports door-to-door, letting assignees rebook flights confident their paperwork is in order. Learn more at https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/
Aviation analysts say the disruption could stretch into the spring schedule if geopolitical rhetoric intensifies. EASA’s bulletin remains in force until mid-February, and any missile-related incident would likely prompt instant hard closures of regional FIRs, echoing the mass diversions seen after previous Gulf crises. Until tensions ease, expect longer flight times, rolling cancellations, and heightened anxiety among relocating assignees and project teams bound for the UAE.
While Gulf mega-carriers such as Emirates and Etihad continue flying, they are re-routing around the Tehran Flight Information Region, adding 30-90 minutes and higher fuel burn to some rotations. For point-to-point operators the calculus is tougher: KLM has halted services to Dubai, Dammam and Riyadh until further notice, while Lufthansa and Swiss have switched Tel Aviv and Amman sectors to daylight turns to avoid overnight crew lay-overs. Low-cost Wizz Air and IndiGo warn of unexpected tech stops in Cyprus or Greece because of the longer routings.
Corporate mobility teams moving staff through Dubai Hub now face a patchwork of restrictions that change daily. Travellers may discover connections severed at short notice, forcing expensive re-tickets. Employers should monitor the NOTAM feed, work with TMCs to build extra layover buffers and re-check duty-of-care insurance—especially if itineraries transit multiple Gulf gateways.
If rapidly evolving flight schedules leave travelers scrambling for new routings, VisaHQ can smooth at least one variable: documentation. The service’s UAE desk can fast-track visas, flag upcoming policy changes, and courier passports door-to-door, letting assignees rebook flights confident their paperwork is in order. Learn more at https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/
Aviation analysts say the disruption could stretch into the spring schedule if geopolitical rhetoric intensifies. EASA’s bulletin remains in force until mid-February, and any missile-related incident would likely prompt instant hard closures of regional FIRs, echoing the mass diversions seen after previous Gulf crises. Until tensions ease, expect longer flight times, rolling cancellations, and heightened anxiety among relocating assignees and project teams bound for the UAE.










