Dubai International Airport (DXB) – the world’s busiest hub for international passengers – remains open but is running a pared-back timetable as the UAE works through the after-effects of recent regional air-space restrictions. In a detailed briefing on 18 April 2026, Dubai Airports said all three terminals are processing arrivals and departures, yet passengers should expect capped frequencies, uneven daily loads and occasional last-minute cancellations. The disruption traces back to late-February drone and missile attacks linked to the wider Gulf conflict, which prompted temporary airspace closures across the UAE. While a 5 April cease-fire allowed regulators to relax the most stringent flight bans, the General Civil Aviation Authority has kept a one-rotation-per-day limit on many foreign carriers until at least 31 May to maintain contingency capacity.
Amid the evolving schedule constraints, travellers juggling last-minute itinerary shifts may also face questions about entry requirements or visa validity. VisaHQ’s UAE portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) streamlines these checks, offering real-time guidance on tourist, business and transit options and handling the paperwork online so passengers can focus on securing the flights that do operate.
Flag-carrier Emirates is currently flying to roughly 125 destinations – down from 145 – and offers one fee-free date change for tickets purchased before 28 February. Low-cost sister airline flydubai plus Etihad, Air Arabia and dozens of international operators are following similar reduced schedules. Operationally, DXB now handles more than 200 combined Emirates and flydubai flights on strong days; however, real-time trackers showed 124 flights delayed or cancelled across Dubai and Abu Dhabi on 15 April. Long immigration queues for re-accommodation have eased but have not disappeared, leading Dubai Airports to urge travellers to confirm flight status before leaving for the airport and to arrive earlier than usual. Overflow passenger services at Dubai World Central (DWC) and cargo diversions remain in place. For corporates, the fluid situation underscores the need for flexible routing. Travel managers are advising employees to build buffer days into itineraries and to consider alternative hubs such as Muscat, Dammam or Istanbul for critical connections. Insurance providers have updated policy wording to cover extra accommodation and re-booking costs arising from the conflict-related caps, while several mobility consultancies recommend including a “regional disruption clause” in assignment letters issued through Q3 2026. Economically, each percentage point reduction in DXB’s capacity equates to an estimated US $200 million monthly hit to aviation-linked trade and tourism. Sustained recovery therefore holds macro-stakes for the UAE’s non-oil GDP. With Ramadan now over and summer peak season looming, industry analysts expect authorities to lift some limits by mid-June, provided the cease-fire endures and no further security incidents occur. Until then, the message to global mobility teams is vigilance: pre-trip approvals should reference live GCAA notices, and travellers should keep airline apps and Dubai Airports’ alert service active to navigate the fast-changing operating environment.
