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    Global air travel faces severe disruption, with the conflict in Iran forcing the closure of key Middle Eastern hubs like Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi, stranding thousands.

    airBaltic has cancelled about three more weeks of flights to Tel Aviv. It was announced on Thursday that flights to the Israeli city would not run until April 29, instead of April 5 as previously signalled.

    Meanwhile, Finnair has cancelled months of further flights to Doha.

    The Finnish carrier originally said that Doha flights would resume on March 29. On Thursday, that was extended to July 2.

    Adding to the strain on airlines, jet fuel prices have doubled since the conflict began, intensifying pressure on carriers already contending with restricted airspace as pilots reroute to bypass the volatile Middle East.

    Below is the latest on which airlines have cancelled flights to the region, in alphabetical order:

    Aegean Airlines

    Greece's largest carrier cancelled flights to Tel Aviv, Beirut and Amman until April 22, and to Erbil and Baghdad until May 24. Flights to Dubai were cancelled until April 19 and to Riyadh until April 18.

    airBaltic

    Latvia's airBaltic said all flights to Tel Aviv had been cancelled until April 29. All flights to Dubai have been cancelled until October 24.

    Air Canada

    The Canadian carrier cancelled all flights to Tel Aviv until May 2 and all flights to Dubai until March 28.

    A display in the arrivals terminal of the Henri Coanda International Airport shows cancelled flights originating in Middle East countries.

    A display in the arrivals terminal of the Henri Coanda International Airport shows cancelled flights originating in Middle East countries. (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

    Air Europa

    The Spanish airline has cancelled all flights to Tel Aviv until April 10.

    Air France

    Air France has cancelled flights to Tel Aviv and Beirut until March 21 and to Dubai and Riyadh until March 20.

    British Airways

    British Airways has extended the suspension of its flights to the Middle East until June.

    On Monday, Britain's flag carrier confirmed it would be extending cancellations to Amman, Bahrain, Dubai and Tel Aviv up to and including May 31.

    Flights to Doha in Qatar have also been scrapped until April 30.

    Cathay Pacific

    The Hong Kong airline has cancelled all passenger flights to and from Dubai and Riyadh, as well as cargo freighter flights to Dubai and Riyadh, until April 30.

    Delta

    The US carrier has cancelled flights from New York to Tel Aviv until March 31 and from Tel Aviv to New York until April 1. The restart of its Atlanta to Tel Aviv service has been delayed, with flights to Tel Aviv now paused until August 4 and from Tel Aviv until August 5.

    EL AL Israel Airlines

    El AL and Sundor said regular flights were cancelled until March 21.

    Emirates

    The UAE airline said it was operating a reduced flight schedule following a partial reopening of regional airspace.

    Ethiad Airways

    The UAE carrier said it resumed a limited commercial flight schedule between Abu Dhabi and a number of key destinations.

    Finnair

    The Finnish carrier cancelled its Dubai flights until March 29 and Doha flights until July 2, continuing to avoid the airspace of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Israel.

    Flynas

    Saudi Arabian budget airline Flynas extended its suspension of flights to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Doha, Bahrain, Kuwait, Iraq and Syria until March 31.

    Indigo

    The Indian airline suspended operations to Doha, Kuwait, Bahrain, Dammam, Fujairah, Ras Al Khaimah and Sharjah until March 28.

    ITA Airways

    ITA Airways has suspended flights to Tel Aviv until April 2 and extended Dubai cancellations until March 29, continuing to avoid the airspace of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Israel.

    Japan Airlines

    Japan Airlines suspended scheduled Tokyo-Doha flights until March 31 and Doha-Tokyo flights until April 1.

    KLM

    KLM said flights to Riyadh, Dammam and Dubai were suspended until March 28 and flights to Tel Aviv until April 11.

    LOT

    The Polish airline said all flights to Dubai were cancelled until March 28 and to Tel Aviv until April 18. LOT also cancelled flights to Riyadh until March 24 and to Beirut from March 31 to April 30.

    Lufthansa Group

    The German airline group, which includes Lufthansa, Austrian Airlines, Swiss, Brussels Airlines and ITA Airways, suspended flights to Tel Aviv through April 9, and to Beirut, Dubai, Amman, Erbil, Dammam and Abu Dhabi until March 28. Flights to Tehran were suspended through April 30 and to Riyadh until April 5 for operational reasons.

    Passengers wait amid flight disruptions as a result of the Israeli-US strikes on Iran, at Ngurah Rai International Airport on Indonesia's resort island of Bali.

    Passengers wait amid flight disruptions as a result of the Israeli-US strikes on Iran, at Ngurah Rai International Airport on Indonesia's resort island of Bali. (AFP/Getty)

    Malaysia Airlines

    The Malaysian carrier suspended all flights to Doha until March 28.

    Norwegian Air

    The low-cost airline plans to fly to Tel Aviv and Beirut from June 15, instead of April 1 and April 4, respectively, as it had previously planned.

    Pegasus

    Pegasus Airlines cancelled its Iran, Iraq, Amman, Beirut, Kuwait, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah flights until April 12. Flights to Riyadh were cancelled until March 23.

    Qatar Airways

    The carrier said it would operate a revised limited number of flights from March 18 to March 28.

    Turkish Airlines

    Turkish Airlines cancelled flights to Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Doha, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, Bahrain and Dammam until March 19, while flights to Iran were cancelled until March 20, the Turkish transport ministry said.

    Wizz Air

    The low-cost airline suspended flights to Israel until March 29 and to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Amman and Jeddah from mainland European destinations until the middle of September.

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