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  7. Kuwait International Airport still shut—Australians urged to reroute as Gulf disruption drags on

Kuwait International Airport still shut—Australians urged to reroute as Gulf disruption drags on

Apr 12, 2026
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Kuwait International Airport still shut—Australians urged to reroute as Gulf disruption drags on
Kuwait’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) confirmed on 11 April that Kuwait International Airport remains closed to all commercial passenger flights, six weeks after missile and drone strikes damaged fuel depots and radar systems. International Business Times notes that departure boards continue to show zero scheduled movements; the government has given no reopening date despite a tentative U.S.–Iran ceasefire. While no Australian airlines serve Kuwait directly, Gulf hubs form critical links for Australia–Europe itineraries and for FIFO personnel transiting to regional energy projects. With KWI offline, carriers are funnelling passengers through Dubai, Doha and Dammam, compounding capacity pressure just as Europe’s summer peak begins. Travellers holding Qatar Airways or Emirates through-tickets that connected onward to Kuwait are being re-booked or refunded. Freight is also affected—Australian exporters of chilled meat and pharmaceuticals report extended transit times as shipments are trucked from Saudi Arabia or Bahrain.

Kuwait International Airport still shut—Australians urged to reroute as Gulf disruption drags on


For organisations struggling to keep track of shifting visa validity and alternative entry requirements amid KWI’s shutdown, the travel-document specialists at VisaHQ can shoulder the administrative load. Through its Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/), the firm provides real-time visa advisory, expedited processing for neighbouring Gulf states, and customised dashboards that alert mobility managers the moment regulations change, helping ensure personnel are never stranded by paperwork.

Corporate mobility teams should flag Kuwait as a “red” destination: entry visas issued before 28 February are effectively unusable until the suspension lifts. Companies with Middle-East assignees should update crisis plans and verify that alternative routings comply with insurance and duty-of-care policies, particularly given DFAT’s ‘Do Not Travel’ advice for several neighbouring states. Insurance specialists say the prolonged closure is triggering policy exclusions for ‘known events’, meaning new tickets purchased after 28 February may not be covered for additional costs. Travellers already overseas should secure written airline confirmation of route changes to support any claims. Analysts expect that even when the airport reopens, heightened security protocols could slow arrivals processing for months—something mobility planners must factor into project timelines and staff rotations.

Australian Visas & Immigration Team @ VisaHQ

VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.

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