
Dubai International Airport (DXB) logged a second consecutive incident-free morning on April 2, signalling that the frantic cycle of closures and diversions seen in March is abating. According to travel-tracking site TravelPirates, Emirates is now flying to roughly 127 destinations, with Air France expected to restore Paris flights later today. Twenty routes—including Houston, Los Angeles and Osaka—remain suspended, but the overall trajectory is upward. Operationally, passengers should still arrive 30–45 minutes earlier than pre-crisis norms: security throughput is improving but baggage systems are clearing a backlog. Dubai Airports urges travellers not to approach DXB without a confirmed departure time.
The good news for mobility teams is that the airport’s stabilisation coincides with the expiration of the UAE’s special residency-visa grace period at midnight on March 31; standard entry rules are now back in force.
For corporate mobility managers racing to comply with those reinstated entry rules, VisaHQ can streamline the process. The company’s online platform—found at https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/—handles UAE visa applications end-to-end, offers real-time tracking and provides expedited options, reducing administrative burden while ensuring assignees stay compliant.
From an assignee-management perspective, companies must realign travel approvals with the reinstated visa-compliance timelines—particularly the mandatory medical tests and Emirates ID biometrics that were temporarily relaxed. Meanwhile, airlines are offering a degree of flexibility: Emirates will allow free rebooking for travel originally scheduled between February 28 and April 30, provided changes are made by June 15. Risk managers should retain elevated monitoring levels. Although flight volumes are climbing, 20 key city-pairs remain offline and European carriers’ return dates are provisional. Contingency routings via Doha or Muscat should remain active until schedule resilience is proven over a longer window.
The good news for mobility teams is that the airport’s stabilisation coincides with the expiration of the UAE’s special residency-visa grace period at midnight on March 31; standard entry rules are now back in force.
For corporate mobility managers racing to comply with those reinstated entry rules, VisaHQ can streamline the process. The company’s online platform—found at https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/—handles UAE visa applications end-to-end, offers real-time tracking and provides expedited options, reducing administrative burden while ensuring assignees stay compliant.
From an assignee-management perspective, companies must realign travel approvals with the reinstated visa-compliance timelines—particularly the mandatory medical tests and Emirates ID biometrics that were temporarily relaxed. Meanwhile, airlines are offering a degree of flexibility: Emirates will allow free rebooking for travel originally scheduled between February 28 and April 30, provided changes are made by June 15. Risk managers should retain elevated monitoring levels. Although flight volumes are climbing, 20 key city-pairs remain offline and European carriers’ return dates are provisional. Contingency routings via Doha or Muscat should remain active until schedule resilience is proven over a longer window.