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Dubai restricts foreign flights until May 31. Letters show that Indian airlines are the hardest hit.

Due to the Iran Crisis, Dubai has limited foreign airlines to only one?flight per day to its airports. This has triggered revenue loss concerns among Indian carriers, which had more flights planned than any other airline. In a March 31 letter to the Indian government, the Federation of Indian 'Airlines (FIA), which represents IndiGo, Air India, and SpiceJet as top carriers, asked India to pressure Dubai authorities to lift curbs. If that didn't work, it suggested taking reciprocal measures against Dubai carriers such as Emirates and flydubai. Indian carriers have already been put under financial strain by higher fuel costs and longer routes to Western destinations due to the ban on using Pakistani airspace that has been in place since last year as a result of military tensions between two neighbours. Dubai Airports, in a March 27 private email, said that carriers will be allowed to make one round trip a day between the smaller Al Maktoum International Airport and Dubai International Airport, the busiest hub for international travel.

The FIA said that carriers are limited to only one rotation a day until the capacity permits more. Additional slots will then be assigned if there is capacity available. The FIA notified the Indian government that curbs are not being applied to Dubai airlines like Emirates and flydubai. This could result in "substantial revenue losses".

Dubai Airports and Dubai's Media office have not responded to requests for comment. Flydubai stated that its flight schedules had been approved by the appropriate authorities. Emirates did not reply to a comment request.

Emirates and other Gulf carriers have complained for years about India's bilateral agreements on air services that limit the number of seats a country can deploy between nations. Indian authorities claim that such agreements protect Indian airlines from the fierce competition in the market.

INDIAN CARRIERS HARDEST HIT by CAPS India was the biggest source of passengers at DXB in 2025 with 11,9 million travellers.

Cirium's April and May schedule data shows that Indian airlines will be the most affected by the Dubai cap.

Air India Express and Air India have more than 750 flights scheduled into DXB during that time period. IndiGo is the leader with 481, followed closely by Saudia, Gulf Air and Gulf Air who have planned 480 and 404 flights, respectively. SpiceJet, India's airline, had planned 61 flights. According to Flightradar24, the cap of one flight per day would be 30 or 31 flights for each airline. This is compared to the hundreds daily flights flown by Emirates & flydubai.

IndiGo said in a press release that the Middle East Crisis and the new Dubai Extended restrictions "significantly restricted" its operations, as it had a summer schedule approved of 15 flights daily from India to Dubai.

IndiGo stated in its first remarks on the crisis that "a significant part of IndiGo’s capacity and aircraft times are currently underutilized."

Air India, SpiceJet, and the Indian authorities have not responded to requests for comments. Before the crisis, Indian carriers had fewer flights than other major airlines such as Lufthansa and Singapore Airlines. They have now cancelled all flights until May 31. Instead, they are adding more nonstop Asia-Europe flight to take advantage the strong passenger demand which has driven up prices.

(source: Reuters)