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A family from Washington stranded in Abu Dhabi for five days. A woman who paid $1,600 extra just to reach home. A chef from Dallas stuck in Doha saying “They say get out โ but how, when all airspace is closed?” This is not a news bulletin. This is the new reality of travel in 2026 โ and it could affect you.
Picture this. You have saved up for months. Flights booked. Hotel confirmed. Bags packed. You are mid-journey โ a layover in Dubai, connecting to your holiday. Then, somewhere between takeoff and landing, a war escalates. Your phone floods with notifications. Your connecting flight simply does not exist anymore. And suddenly the only question in your mind is: How do I get home?
This is not a hypothetical. This is exactly what happened to hundreds of thousands of real people at the end of February 2026 โ and is still happening now. The story of how it happened, and what it means for every single person with a trip planned this year, deserves a clear, honest explanation. That is what this is.
The US State Department has urged all citizens to depart Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, UAE, and Yemen using available commercial flights. Canada, the UK, and the EU have issued identical warnings. If you have travel booked to or through any of these countries โ act now, not later.
It Started on a Saturday Morning
On February 28, 2026, US and Israeli forces launched large-scale strikes on Iran. Within hours, the consequences spread far beyond the conflict itself โ they spread into the sky above millions of travelers who had nothing to do with the war below.
Iraq closed its airspace immediately. Iran’s airspace shut down. Israel, Syria, Lebanon followed. Then strikes hit Gulf targets directly โ and that is when global aviation held its breath, because the Gulf is not just a region. It is the single most important crossroads of international travel on Earth.
Dubai International Airport โ the world’s busiest airport for international passengers, handling 4.9 million seats in February alone โ was directly hit by Iranian drone strikes. Passengers inside the terminal filmed themselves fleeing smoke-filled corridors. The airport dropped 85% of its scheduled flights almost overnight. Abu Dhabi and Doha followed.
“It’s pretty well the biggest shutdown we’ve seen certainly since the COVID pandemic.”
โ Paul Charles, CEO of PC Agency, one of the world’s leading travel consultancies“We stayed on calls with the airline for almost two days trying to figure out another flight. We occasionally heard explosions from air defense systems intercepting missiles or drones โ but we tried to stay calm because the kids were there.”
โ Family stranded in Abu Dhabi, reported by Local10 News, March 4, 2026Cancellations across seven major Middle East airports โ Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Dubai World Central โ exceeded 9,500 flights in just the first three days. By the end of the first week, 21,300 flights had been cancelled. At 180 passengers per flight, that is nearly four million people with their lives suddenly on hold.
The Desperate Scramble to Get Home
What followed revealed something deeply uncomfortable about how modern travel works โ and how quickly it can collapse when the political foundations shift beneath it.
“We can’t get home, we can’t go back to work, we can’t get the kids back to school.”
โ Tatiana Leclerc, French tourist stranded in Thailand after her Dubai-connecting flight was cancelled. Al Jazeera, March 3, 2026.“They say ‘Get out’ โ but how do you expect us to get out when all airspace is closed? They just have been cancelling every flight. I want to go home.”
โ Odies Turner, 32, chef from Dallas, stranded in Doha. Al Jazeera, March 3, 2026.Wealthy travelers paid up to $200,000 to charter private flights out of the region. Others faced ticket prices surging to ยฃ4,000 one-way from Dubai to London. Some families camped in airport terminals for three, four, five nights.
“I had to pay $1,600 to get to Shanghai โ more than double the price of my original ticket.”
โ Gong, 30, caught in the disruption. CNBC, March 5, 2026.The UK’s first evacuation charter flight from Oman landed at London Stansted on March 6 after a 24-hour delay. Australia ran four repatriation flights within 24 hours โ then four more. Up to 8,000 passengers were stranded in Qatar alone, with the government covering hotel costs and extending their visas. Oman Air quietly became the hero of the crisis, operating almost 80 extra flights and helping 97,000 passengers get home.
Eddie and Jan Dupuy, a couple from Tacoma, Washington, had their Emirates flight cancelled. Then their rebooking cancelled. They called the State Department three times, sent multiple emails, filed a crisis intake report. When they spoke to TIME magazine โ they were still waiting.
Why a War in the Middle East Affects Your Flight From London to Singapore
This is the question most travelers don’t think to ask โ until they’re stranded at 2am in an airport wondering what happened.
For decades, the fastest routes between Europe and Asia flew straight through the Middle East. Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi weren’t just transit stops โ they were the world’s relay race baton, passed between continents hundreds of times a day. When that corridor closes, the consequences are not regional. They are global.
As aviation analyst Brendan Stanton put it: “You could be anywhere around the world and you will likely be affected. An aircraft currently sitting in London โ the airline might have anticipated it being in Singapore or Brisbane or somewhere else.”
Think of it as a vast invisible game of dominoes. One aircraft arrives late into Dubai. That plane was due in Mumbai two hours later. The Mumbai flight delays. The Johannesburg departure from Mumbai is now late too. A war in the Middle East just disrupted a flight in South Africa.
Current Airspace Status โ March 2026
| Country / Region | Status | What It Means for You |
|---|---|---|
| ๐ฎ๐ท Iran | Closed | Primary driver of the crisis โ all civil flights banned |
| ๐ฎ๐ถ Iraq | Closed | Active missiles & drones โ Baghdad airspace shut |
| ๐ฆ๐ช UAE โ Dubai / Abu Dhabi | Partial | Airports struck โ 85% of flights cancelled, limited resuming |
| ๐ถ๐ฆ Qatar โ Doha | Repatriation Only | Qatar Airways normal ops suspended โ repatriation flights only |
| ๐ฎ๐ฑ Israel | Limited | Phased reopening โ 10,000 passengers/day target |
| ๐ฌ๐ง British Airways | Suspended | All flights to Amman, Bahrain, Doha, Dubai, Tel Aviv suspended. Abu Dhabi cancelled until later this year. |
| ๐ฉ๐ช Lufthansa / Swiss / Austrian | Suspended | Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Dammam suspended. Tehran until April 30. |
| ๐บ๐ฆ Ukraine | Closed Since 2022 | Still fully closed โ adds 1โ4 hrs to all EuropeโAsia routes |
| ๐ท๐บ Russia | Closed โ 35+ Nations | 17 million kmยฒ off-limits โ structural global rerouting |
| ๐ฎ๐ณ India ยท ๐ต๐ฐ Pakistan ยท ๐ด๐ฒ Oman | Open | Key rerouting corridors โ Oman Air flew 97,000 stranded passengers |
Will This Make Your Next Flight More Expensive?
Here is what is not being said loudly enough: this disruption has a direct, measurable financial impact on every flight that routes through or near these zones โ and that impact does not disappear when the conflict eases.
Longer routes burn more fuel. Delta Air Lines has stated that every 1-cent increase in jet fuel per gallon adds $40 million to its annual bill โ meaning a 10% rise adds $1 billion to Delta’s costs in 2026 alone. On top of that, war risk insurance premiums โ what airlines pay to fly near conflict zones โ have spiked dramatically. And oil prices are already up roughly 30% this year amid the widening conflict.
“This has spiraled into an aviation quagmire.”
โ Henry Harteveldt, former airline executive & founder, Atmosphere Research GroupThe global travel industry is worth an estimated $11.7 trillion. Airlines are already rerouting โ Qantas flights from Perth to London now stop in Singapore to refuel, picking up around 60 extra passengers to offset cost. These adaptations work short term. But if the conflict becomes prolonged, ticket prices on EuropeโAsia routes will rise. It is not a question of if โ it is a question of when.
Exactly What You Should Do Right Now
If you have travel planned in the coming weeks โ especially anything routing through the Gulf, Middle East, or connecting via Dubai or Doha โ here is a plain, honest, practical guide.
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1Check your government’s official travel advisory โ today Not a travel blog. Not social media. The US State Department, UK FCDO, and Australian DFAT have all issued “Do Not Travel” or “Depart Now” advisories for 14+ countries. These are updated with real intelligence in real time.
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2Call your airline directly โ don’t just check the app Emirates, Etihad, British Airways, Lufthansa, Air India, and most major carriers have issued flexible rebooking and full refund waivers for affected routes. Airlines warn that call wait times are long โ be patient, it’s worth it.
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3Read your travel insurance policy right now โ before you need to claim Many standard policies contain war and conflict exclusion clauses that could mean your claim is rejected outright. Some premium policies cover cancellations triggered by government advisories. Check now, not at the airport.
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4Build significant buffer into any connection via the Gulf Even on routes not directly in the conflict zone, displaced aircraft and crew shortages are causing knock-on delays globally right now. Tight connections anywhere near the affected region are extremely high-risk.
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5If your trip can be rerouted โ seriously consider it Southeast Asia, Europe, the Americas, East Africa, South Asia, and Japan are unaffected by current closures. If you have flexibility in your routing or destination, now is the moment to use it.
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6Talk to a real travel expert โ not just a booking algorithm Apps cannot reroute you proactively, warn you before your flight is cancelled, or negotiate with airlines on your behalf. A specialist travel agency monitoring global disruptions in real time can do all three.
Your Trip Is Too Important to Leave to Chance.
The Dipesh Tours team has been monitoring this situation in real time โ every airline waiver, every route change, every reopening. Whether you need to reroute an existing booking, plan a trip safely around affected regions, or simply want an honest answer about whether it is safe to travel โ we are here. Real people. Real expertise. No automated chatbots.
Get Expert Advice Now Browse Safe Destinations โThe Bigger Picture Nobody Is Talking About
The Middle East crisis of 2026 did not come from nowhere. In 2022, Russia closed its airspace to 35 nations โ nobody predicted it would still be shut in 2026. In January 2026, US strikes on Venezuela closed Caribbean airspace, stranding tourists at resorts. In February, a cartel killing in Mexico grounded Puerto Vallarta flights. Millions of travelers have been swept up in geopolitical events this year alone โ people far from any frontline who were anything but immune to the ripple effects.
The world is not becoming more stable. And travel โ which depends more than almost any other industry on political calm โ is feeling that instability in ways that are becoming impossible to ignore.
This is not a reason to stop travelling. The world is still extraordinary. The experiences that travel offers are still completely irreplaceable. But it is a powerful reason to travel smarter, with people who know the world rather than algorithms that just find the cheapest fare.
The question is not whether global events will disrupt travel again. They will. The question is: when it happens, will you have someone in your corner?
Active Travel Advisories โ March 10, 2026
Always verify these directly on your government’s official travel advisory website before making any decisions.
Source: US State Department, UK FCDO, EASA ยท Updated March 10, 2026
Questions Every Traveler Is Asking Right Now
As of March 10, 2026, Dubai has resumed very limited operations but dropped 85% of scheduled flights since February 28. British Airways has cancelled its Abu Dhabi services until later this year. Qatar Airways remains suspended, operating repatriation-only flights from Muscat and Riyadh. Do not travel to either airport without first confirming your specific flight with your airline and checking your government’s travel advisory.
According to Flightradar24, over 21,300 flights were cancelled across seven major Middle Eastern airports โ Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Dubai World Central โ between February 28 and March 3, 2026 alone. On the single worst day (March 1), over 3,400 flights were cancelled in 24 hours. This is the largest aviation disruption since COVID-19.
This depends entirely on your specific policy. Many standard and budget policies contain explicit war and conflict exclusion clauses โ your claim could be rejected outright. Some premium policies cover cancellations triggered by official government travel advisories. Read your policy document carefully right now โ specifically the section on war, terrorism, and civil unrest. Do not assume you are covered without verifying.
Yes, potentially. Dubai and Doha are two of the world’s biggest transit hubs. If your itinerary includes any layover at either airport, your connecting flight may be cancelled even if your final destination is completely unaffected by the conflict. Contact your airline immediately to review your routing options and ask specifically about alternative routing.
The vast majority of the world remains open and safe. Europe, Southeast and South Asia, East Africa, the Americas, Japan, and India are completely unaffected by current airspace closures. The key is routing your journey around the closed zones and using an expert travel partner to ensure your itinerary is protected. Contact Dipesh Tours to plan a trip you can count on.
The Dipesh Tours team has been crafting extraordinary, safe, and personalised travel experiences for clients across the globe. We monitor world events, travel advisories, and airline disruptions in real time โ so you don’t have to. When the world changes, we make sure your journey doesn’t have to.


