Thousands Of Passengers Suffer Across Asia As UAE, Israel, Iran, Singapore, India, Saudi, And More Cancel 1,925 Flights And Delay 1,784, Hitting Emirates, Etihad, Singapore, IndiGo, And Others In Dubai, Tel Aviv, Tehran, Delhi, And More

Thousands of passengers abandoned in Asia and the Middle East today as 3,709 flight cancellations and delays hit Dubai International Airport (1,012 cancellations, 128 delays) in Dubai (UAE); Abu Dhabi International Airport (252 cancellations, 48 delays) in Abu Dhabi (UAE); King Abdulaziz International Airport (110 cancellations, 124 delays) in Jeddah (Saudi Arabia); King Fahd International Airport (64 cancellations, 72 delays) in Dammam (Saudi Arabia); Bahrain International Airport (141 cancellations, 27 delays) in Manama (Bahrain); Ben Gurion International Airport (140 cancellations, 3 delays) in Tel Aviv (Israel); Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen International Airport (57 cancellations, 128 delays) in Istanbul (Turkey); Imam Khomeini International Airport (16 cancellations, 2 delays) in Tehran (Iran); Singapore Changi Airport (17 cancellations, 214 delays) in Singapore; Kuala Lumpur International Airport (29 cancellations, 406 delays) in Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia); Soekarno–Hatta International Airport (20 cancellations, 195 delays) in Jakarta (Indonesia); Sultan Hasanuddin International Airport (5 cancellations, 99 delays) in Makassar (Indonesia); Indira Gandhi International Airport (55 cancellations, 265 delays) in New Delhi (India); and Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport (7 cancellations, 73 delays) in Kolkata (India).
The most affected airlines included Emirates (502 cancellations, 56 delays), FlyDubai (294 cancellations, 43 delays), Etihad Airways (33 cancellations, 36 delays), Saudia (92 cancellations, 54 delays), IndiGo (78 cancellations, 182 delays), Gulf Air (34 cancellations, 4 delays), Pegasus Airlines (59 cancellations, 90 delays) and Air India (22 cancellations, 105 delays). Other widely recognized carriers including Singapore Airlines, Qatar Airways, United, Wizz Air, Malaysia Airlines, AirAsia, Scoot, SpiceJet, El Al, Turkish Airlines and China Eastern also faced operational disruption.
Southeast and South Asian hubs experiencing congestion-driven delays, while Gulf and Middle Eastern airports saw cancellation-heavy operational suspensions following the deadly U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran.
- Updated today: A total of 3,709 flight disruptions (1,925 cancellations and 1,784 delays) were recorded across 14 airports.
- Dubai recorded the single largest cancellation event with 1,012 cancellations.
- Kuala Lumpur registered the highest delay count at 406 delays.
- Abu Dhabi (252 cancellations) and Bahrain (141 cancellations) ranked among the most cancellation-heavy hubs.
- Southeast Asian airports showed delay-dominant congestion patterns.
- Gulf-region hubs experienced structured cancellation waves across multiple carriers.
Most Affected Asian Airports
Dubai International Airport
Dubai recorded 1,012 cancellations and 128 delays, marking the largest operational disruption in the dataset, largely driven by Emirates and FlyDubai suspensions.
Abu Dhabi International Airport
Abu Dhabi reported 252 cancellations and 48 delays, with Etihad Airways accounting for the majority of cancellations.
Kuala Lumpur International Airport
Kuala Lumpur experienced 406 delays and 29 cancellations, the highest delay cluster recorded.
Indira Gandhi International Airport
Delhi saw 265 delays and 55 cancellations, positioning it among the most delay-heavy South Asian hubs.
Singapore Changi Airport
Singapore logged 214 delays and 17 cancellations, reflecting high traffic congestion with limited cancellations.
Soekarno–Hatta International Airport
Jakarta recorded 195 delays and 20 cancellations, largely delay-driven.
King Abdulaziz International Airport
Jeddah experienced 124 delays and 110 cancellations, showing a mixed but cancellation-heavy profile.
Bahrain International Airport
Manama recorded 141 cancellations and 27 delays, primarily driven by Gulf Air suspensions.
Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen International Airport
Istanbul reported 128 delays and 57 cancellations, with Pegasus Airlines accounting for most disruptions.
Airlines Most Affected by Asia Flight Cancellations and Delays
Emirates recorded the highest level of disruption overall, with 502 cancellations and 56 delays, driven largely by severe operational suspensions in Dubai, along with additional impacts in Tel Aviv, Delhi, Kolkata and other regional hubs.
FlyDubai followed with 294 cancellations and 43 delays, concentrated primarily in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, while also seeing disruption in Tel Aviv and other Gulf-linked routes.
Etihad Airways reported 33 cancellations and 36 delays, with the bulk of cancellations occurring in Abu Dhabi and additional suspensions across Saudi Arabia and Israel-bound operations.
Saudia experienced 92 cancellations and 54 delays, significantly impacting airports in Jeddah, Dammam and other regional gateways.
IndiGo recorded 78 cancellations and 182 delays, with delays heavily concentrated at Delhi and Kuala Lumpur, alongside Gulf route disruptions.
Air India logged 22 cancellations and 105 delays, primarily centered at Delhi, with additional operational impact across regional and Gulf routes.
Pegasus Airlines reported 59 cancellations and 90 delays, most notably at Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen and Tehran.
Gulf Air faced 34 cancellations and 4 delays, with Bahrain bearing the brunt of the airline’s operational suspensions.
What Can Affected Passengers Do?
- Check airline websites and official apps for updated flight status.
- Contact airline customer service for rebooking or refund options.
- Review travel insurance coverage for disruption-related claims.
- Arrive early at the airport if travel is essential.
- Monitor airport announcements and official social media updates.
- Keep receipts for meals, accommodation, and alternate travel arrangements.
Overview of Asia Flight Cancellations
The disruption wave was led by Emirates, FlyDubai, Etihad Airways, Saudia, IndiGo, Air India, Pegasus Airlines and Gulf Air, with severe impact concentrated in Dubai (UAE), Abu Dhabi (UAE), Manama (Bahrain), Jeddah (Saudi Arabia), Dammam (Saudi Arabia), Tel Aviv (Israel), Istanbul (Turkey), Tehran (Iran), Singapore (Singapore), Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), Jakarta (Indonesia), Makassar (Indonesia), New Delhi (India) and Kolkata (India).
Cancellation-heavy patterns were most visible in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and Tel Aviv, while delay-heavy congestion dominated Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Delhi and Jakarta. Across the region spanning the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Israel, Turkey, Iran, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and India, airlines faced widespread operational strain, producing one of the largest multi-hub disruption events.
Source: Different airports and FlightAware
The post Thousands Of Passengers Suffer Across Asia As UAE, Israel, Iran, Singapore, India, Saudi, And More Cancel 1,925 Flights And Delay 1,784, Hitting Emirates, Etihad, Singapore, IndiGo, And Others In Dubai, Tel Aviv, Tehran, Delhi, And More appeared first on Travel And Tour World.