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Hundreds of Travelers Stranded at Seeb International Airport,Muscat ,Oman as 37 Flights Are Delayed and 55 Canceled, Disrupting Oman Air, SalamAir, and More Across Regional and Long-Haul Connections and Key Gulf Transit Routes

4 March 2026 at 02:32
Hundreds of Travelers Stranded at Seeb International Airport,Muscat ,Oman as 37 Flights Are Delayed and 55 Canceled, Disrupting Oman Air, SalamAir, and More Across Regional and Long-Haul Connections and Key Gulf Transit Routes
Muscat’s Seeb International Airport sees 37 delays and 55 cancellations as regional airspace disruptions force airlines to cancel, reroute, and rebook.

Seeb International Airport (Muscat International Airport/MCT) is once again in the spotlight after a new snapshot of flight activity showed 37 delays and 55 cancellations, a combination that is quickly turning routine airport runs into long, uncertain waits. For passengers, the disruption is not just a number on a departures board—it is missed meetings, postponed family reunions, and last-minute hotel extensions as travelers search for a workable new itinerary.

Airport disruption at Seeb International comes as airlines across the region continue to adjust flight paths and timetables in response to evolving conditions in surrounding airspace. In recent days, carriers serving Muscat have issued rolling updates, with cancellations focused on specific routes and delays affecting other services that are still operating.

What’s driving the disruption

The most immediate reason behind the strain is the knock-on impact of regional airspace closures and restrictions, which have forced some airlines to cancel flights outright while others reroute—often adding flying time, reshuffling aircraft rotations, and tightening turnaround windows. Airlines have repeatedly pointed to safety and coordination with relevant authorities as schedules change across the network.

This pattern has been visible in Oman-bound travel for several days, with published advisories noting that a set of routes in and out of Muscat were canceled while “all other flights” could continue but with the possibility of delays. That mixture—targeted cancellations plus system-wide delays—is exactly the kind of operational environment that can quickly inflate disruption totals at a major hub.

What airlines have said publicly

Oman’s flag carrier has previously confirmed that cancellations were applied to a defined list of destinations on specific dates due to regional airspace constraints, while warning that other flights might still face delays. The airline has stressed that passenger and crew safety remains the top priority and urged travelers to monitor official updates before traveling to the airport.

Low-cost carrier SalamAir has also indicated that its network can return to normal in phases, while keeping certain services temporarily suspended depending on the destination and broader regional developments. For travelers, that means the “status” of a route can change quickly—sometimes within the same day—based on operational feasibility and airspace access.

Indian carriers have also been part of the wider disruption story, with notices of temporary suspensions and flexibility policies for customers whose Gulf and Middle East itineraries were affected. Those measures can be critical for travelers trying to rebook around cancellation waves that cascade from one hub to another.

Government and official channels travelers should monitor

For travelers looking for the most reliable, continuously updated direction, official government-linked aviation channels and airline advisories remain essential during fast-moving disruption periods. In Oman, national aviation oversight and safety measures have also been visible through the Civil Aviation Authority’s public communications in the same broader period, reflecting heightened attention to airspace use and safety precautions.

At the passenger level, the most practical approach is to rely on: airline flight-status pages, official airport channels, and government aviation advisories (where available) rather than viral social posts or forwarded messages that may lag behind real-time changes. The difference can be a wasted trip to the terminal—or a timely reroute that saves an entire day.

What passengers can do right now

With 37 delays and 55 cancellations recorded at Seeb International, travelers are generally best served by a short checklist before leaving for the airport:

  • Confirm flight status directly with the airline (not only via third-party trackers) and re-check close to departure time.
  • Use the airline’s self-service tools for rebooking/refunds where offered, since service desks can become overwhelmed during large disruption spikes.
  • If your route is suspended, ask the airline about alternate hubs or later dates; many carriers have offered flexibility during this period, including rescheduling and refund options under defined booking windows.
  • Plan for longer airport dwell time (charging, food, necessary medicines, and documents) because even operating flights may depart late due to inbound aircraft delays.

Why this matters for Oman’s connectivity

Muscat’s airport plays an outsized role in linking Oman with the Gulf, South Asia, and beyond, and even short periods of operational instability can multiply across the region as aircraft and crews end up out of position. When cancellations stack up, the after-effects often continue for days—because restoring a schedule is not only about reopening a route, but also about rebalancing planes, staff, and slots across multiple airports.

Even as some routes stabilize, others can remain vulnerable when surrounding airspace conditions shift again. That is why travelers may see a confusing reality on the ground: one flight boards normally while another—headed to a nearby destination—vanishes from the board with a cancellation notice.

Passenger-first close

For anyone passing through Muscat, Oman via Seeb International Airport, the hardest part of days like this is the waiting: watching the screen refresh, refreshing email for a rebooking link, and trying to explain to family or colleagues—again—why the timeline just changed. The best move is to stay close to official airline updates, keep plans flexible for 24–48 hours, and treat any “confirmed” timing as provisional until you’re actually at the gate.

The post Hundreds of Travelers Stranded at Seeb International Airport,Muscat ,Oman as 37 Flights Are Delayed and 55 Canceled, Disrupting Oman Air, SalamAir, and More Across Regional and Long-Haul Connections and Key Gulf Transit Routes appeared first on Travel And Tour World.
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