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Larnaca Airport cancels 37 flights as Middle-East conflict ripples through Cypriot aviation

Apr 17, 2026
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Larnaca Airport cancels 37 flights as Middle-East conflict ripples through Cypriot aviation
Hermes Airports, the operator of Cyprus’ two international gateways, confirmed that 37 scheduled services—18 arrivals and 19 departures—were pulled from Thursday’s roster at Larnaca on 16 April 2026. Most of the cancelled rotations involved routes to Israel, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Bahrain, all of which are experiencing air-defence alerts following overnight strikes between Iran and Israel. Although Cyprus was not directly targeted, airlines including Emirates, Qatar Airways, El Al and Middle East Airlines pre-emptively grounded flights or swapped wide-bodies for narrow-bodies to avoid crew layovers. British Airways also scrubbed its evening Larnaca–London Heathrow leg, citing “operational constraints linked to regional air-traffic flow restrictions.” The knock-on effect for mobility planners is immediate: hotel occupancy around the airport has spiked as stranded passengers await reaccommodation, and time-critical freight—particularly pharmaceuticals produced in Cyprus’ growing life-sciences sector—faces delays. Travel-risk consultancies have raised the island’s air-transport disruption rating from “Moderate” to “High” for the next 72 hours. Hermes Airports has not imposed a blanket waiver, leaving refund and rebooking policies in the hands of individual carriers. Corporate travel departments are therefore advising staff to retain boarding-pass evidence and to budget for out-of-policy expenses.

Larnaca Airport cancels 37 flights as Middle-East conflict ripples through Cypriot aviation


For travellers caught up in the rerouting scramble, knowing whether they need a visa—or can amend an existing one—can save precious hours. VisaHQ’s portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) consolidates the latest entry rules for Cyprus and neighbouring stop-over points, offers expedited e-visa processing, and provides real-time status alerts, giving both corporate travel managers and leisure passengers a friction-free way to stay compliant amid shifting flight itineraries.

With Tel Aviv’s Ben-Gurion Airport still under intermittent rocket alert, Larnaca had become a popular diversion hub for multinational crews shuttling between Europe and the Levant; the latest cancellations may prompt companies to explore charter options via Paphos or even Heraklion, Crete. Strategically, the episode underscores Cyprus’ vulnerability to external shocks despite its ambitions to become a regional aviation hub. Completion of the EU Entry/Exit System and prospective Schengen accession—scheduled for 2026—could streamline border formalities, but security-driven airspace closures will remain a wildcard for the foreseeable future.

Cypriot 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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