Global airline schedules continue to be severely affected as closures of major Middle Eastern airspace force widespread cancellations and reduced services. The list below summarizes carrier-level changes announced by airlines, presented alphabetically by carrier name. All cancellations, suspensions and dates are reported as released by the carriers.
AEGEAN AIRLINES - Greece's largest carrier has cancelled flights to Riyadh and Amman through June 27 and to Tel Aviv and Beirut through June 26. Services to Erbil and Baghdad are cancelled through July 2, and flights to Dubai are suspended through June 29.
AIRBALTIC - Latvia's airBaltic reported that flights to Tel Aviv are cancelled through May 31. The airline also suspended flights to Dubai until October 24.
AIR CANADA - The Canadian flag carrier has cancelled services to Tel Aviv and Dubai through September 7.
AIR EUROPA - The Spanish carrier has cancelled its flights to Tel Aviv through May 3.
AIR FRANCE-KLM - Air France has suspended flights to Tel Aviv, Beirut, Dubai and Riyadh through May 3. KLM has suspended services to Tel Aviv, Riyadh, Dammam and Dubai through May 17.
CATHAY PACIFIC - The Hong Kong airline has cancelled flights to Dubai and Riyadh through May 31. To address increased passenger demand to Europe, Cathay Pacific will operate additional passenger flights to London, Paris and Zurich during April.
DELTA - The U.S. carrier has cancelled its New York-Tel Aviv flights and pushed back the planned resumption of its Atlanta-Tel Aviv route until September 5. Delta also delayed the planned launch of a Boston-Tel Aviv route, originally scheduled for late October, until further notice.
EL AL ISRAEL AIRLINES - El Al said customers scheduled to depart Israel through April 18 have had their flights cancelled, including associated return segments. The carrier plans to increase destinations served to about 30 from April 13 and to expand that number gradually through the remainder of the month.
EMIRATES - The UAE-based airline said it is operating a reduced flight schedule following a partial reopening of regional airspace.
ETIHAD AIRWAYS - Etihad said it is operating a commercial flight schedule between Abu Dhabi and roughly 80 destinations.
FINNAIR - The Finnish carrier has cancelled flights to Doha through July 2, and continues to avoid the airspace of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Israel. Finnair will not restart Dubai flights until October.
FLYNAS - The Saudi low-cost carrier has suspended flights to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Doha, Bahrain, Kuwait, Iraq and Syria through April 15.
IAG - IAG said British Airways will reduce flights to the Middle East when services resume and will permanently drop Jeddah as a destination. BA intends to add capacity to India and Africa while cutting services to Dubai, Doha and Tel Aviv to one daily flight from July 1, and reducing Riyadh from two daily flights to one from mid-May. These changes apply through the summer season ending October 24, with one Dubai service restarting on October 16. IAG's Spanish low-cost carrier Iberia Express has cancelled flights to Tel Aviv through May 31.
JAPAN AIRLINES - Japan Airlines has suspended Tokyo-Doha scheduled flights until May 10 and Doha-Tokyo flights until May 11. The carrier also announced an additional Tokyo-London service on April 25.
LOT - The Polish carrier suspended flights to Tel Aviv through May 31. LOT also cancelled flights to Riyadh through June 30 and to Beirut from March 31 through May 30. The airline plans to operate its winter route to Dubai in October.
LUFTHANSA GROUP - Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, ITA Airways and Edelweiss have suspended flights to Dubai and Tel Aviv through May 31, and to Abu Dhabi, Amman, Beirut, Dammam, Riyadh, Erbil, Muscat and Tehran through October 24. Lufthansa Cargo follows the same pattern except that its Tel Aviv suspension runs through April 30. Low-cost Eurowings plans to suspend flights to Tel Aviv, Beirut and Erbil through April 30 and to Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Amman through October 24.
MALAYSIA AIRLINES - The Malaysian carrier suspended flights to Doha through June 14.
NORWEGIAN AIR - The low-cost carrier has postponed the planned launch of its Tel Aviv and Beirut services to June 15.
PEGASUS - Turkey's Pegasus Airlines has cancelled flights to Iran, Iraq, Amman, Beirut, Kuwait, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Riyadh, Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah through May 1.
ROYAL AIR MAROC - The Moroccan carrier said flights to Doha are cancelled through June 30 and flights to Dubai through May 31.
QANTAS - Australia's flag carrier is adding services to Rome and Paris to meet stronger demand for European travel. Paris will increase to five round trips weekly from three, and the Perth-Singapore service will expand from daily to 10 flights per week. An updated schedule will be introduced progressively from mid-April and run until late July.
QATAR AIRWAYS - The carrier said it is gradually increasing flights from Doha to more than 120 destinations by mid-May.
SINGAPORE AIRLINES - Singapore Airlines extended its suspension of Singapore-Dubai flights through May 31, while adding services on the Singapore-London Gatwick and Singapore-Melbourne routes from late March through October 24 to meet heightened demand.
TURKISH AIRLINES / SUNEXPRESS - SunExpress, Turkish Airlines' joint venture with Lufthansa, has cancelled flights to Dubai through April 30.
WIZZ AIR - The low-cost carrier suspended flights to Israel through April 13, and suspended flights to Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Amman from mainland Europe through mid-September. Wizz Air also suspended all flights to Medina indefinitely.
These schedule changes include both passenger and cargo services in some cases, with Lufthansa Cargo specifying distinct suspension timing for Tel Aviv compared with passenger operations. Some carriers are responding to diverted demand by increasing services on other long-haul European routes - for example, Cathay Pacific adding capacity to London, Paris and Zurich in April, and Qantas boosting Rome and Paris services through mid-summer scheduling windows.
Across the announcements, suspension end dates vary widely - from short-term pauses through April and May, to cancellations lasting into June, July and, for several carriers, October. A number of airlines have explicitly noted permanent route changes or seasonal restarts tied to autumn or winter scheduling windows.
Notably, some carriers are increasing frequencies on alternative corridors, while others have delayed planned new routes indefinitely or until later in the year. Several airlines also referenced continued avoidance of specific national airspaces.
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Given the breadth of carrier responses, disruptions to consumer travel plans, cargo movements and airline network capacity remain significant and are likely to persist until regional airspace access stabilizes or further updates are provided by the affected carriers or aviation authorities.