
The fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran has enabled Iraq, Syria and Bahrain to reopen their airspace, prompting Gulf airlines to ramp up schedules—and Irish travellers are immediate beneficiaries.
Irish passengers making the most of the newly reinstated services may also need to navigate fresh visa or transit rules as routings evolve. VisaHQ’s Ireland platform (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) lets travellers and corporate mobility teams check requirements in seconds and secure e-visas or transit permits online, streamlining compliance for everything from short stopovers in Doha to onward journeys across Asia-Pacific.
On 11 April Qatar Airways reinstated two daily rotations on the Dublin–Doha route, while Emirates logged its busiest day since the conflict began, with flight EK162/161 operating at full capacity. Re-established overflight corridors reduce block times by up to 70 minutes compared with the wide detours in place during March, shaving both fuel burn and connection times to Asia-Pacific hubs. Travel-management companies report that fares, which had spiked by 45 % during the height of the crisis, are already trending down as capacity returns. However, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) continues to advise carriers to avoid parts of Iranian and Kuwaiti airspace until at least 24 April, and many European airlines still have aircraft stranded in Jordanian maintenance facilities due to routing constraints. Global mobility teams should therefore verify routing stability before ticketing and consider split-ticket strategies that permit last-minute changes without punitive fees. For Irish exporters and multinationals the restoration of Doha and Dubai frequencies is critical: the Gulf hubs provide one-stop connections to 30+ cities in India, 20 in Southeast Asia and nine in Australasia. The development also eases the movement of Middle-East based assignees into Ireland’s pharmaceutical and tech sectors, which rely heavily on talent inflows from the region.
Irish passengers making the most of the newly reinstated services may also need to navigate fresh visa or transit rules as routings evolve. VisaHQ’s Ireland platform (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) lets travellers and corporate mobility teams check requirements in seconds and secure e-visas or transit permits online, streamlining compliance for everything from short stopovers in Doha to onward journeys across Asia-Pacific.
On 11 April Qatar Airways reinstated two daily rotations on the Dublin–Doha route, while Emirates logged its busiest day since the conflict began, with flight EK162/161 operating at full capacity. Re-established overflight corridors reduce block times by up to 70 minutes compared with the wide detours in place during March, shaving both fuel burn and connection times to Asia-Pacific hubs. Travel-management companies report that fares, which had spiked by 45 % during the height of the crisis, are already trending down as capacity returns. However, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) continues to advise carriers to avoid parts of Iranian and Kuwaiti airspace until at least 24 April, and many European airlines still have aircraft stranded in Jordanian maintenance facilities due to routing constraints. Global mobility teams should therefore verify routing stability before ticketing and consider split-ticket strategies that permit last-minute changes without punitive fees. For Irish exporters and multinationals the restoration of Doha and Dubai frequencies is critical: the Gulf hubs provide one-stop connections to 30+ cities in India, 20 in Southeast Asia and nine in Australasia. The development also eases the movement of Middle-East based assignees into Ireland’s pharmaceutical and tech sectors, which rely heavily on talent inflows from the region.