
The United Arab Emirates acted swiftly in the early hours of 5 May to seal large portions of its Flight Information Region (FIR) after Iranian forces launched a new wave of ballistic- and cruise-missile attacks against the country. Notices to Airmen (NOTAMs) issued by the General Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) declared the “EMIRATES FIR PARTIALLY CLOSED,” allowing arrivals and departures only through a handful of southerly entry and exit points. Airlines were told the restrictions will remain in force until at least 11 May while security agencies assess the evolving threat environment. The decision reverses the GCAA’s 2 May declaration that UAE skies were once again fully open after a month-long war-time shutdown. In practice, carriers such as Emirates, Etihad, flydubai and Air Arabia have been forced to cancel or re-route dozens of services. Flight-tracking data showed wide-body jets holding over Saudi Arabia and diverting to Muscat as air-defence batteries in Abu Dhabi and Dubai engaged incoming projectiles.
Amid these uncertainties, travellers and corporate mobility teams can secure peace of mind by leveraging VisaHQ’s expedited visa and travel-document services. The platform’s UAE portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) provides real-time entry-rule updates, electronic visa applications and 24/7 support, helping passengers reroute through neighbouring countries or switch airports without running into paperwork surprises.
Business-travel managers face immediate disruption. With only four approved air-corridors, average sector times between Europe and Asia through the Gulf lengthened by 40-60 minutes, driving up fuel burn and crew-duty costs. Multinational companies operating regional hubs in Dubai are instructing travelling staff to build additional buffer days into trip itineraries and to monitor routings that avoid UAE airspace altogether. Freight forwarders are already quoting emergency war-risk surcharges on east-west belly-cargo. The abrupt closure highlights the fragility of Gulf aviation connectivity in the current security climate. Just 48 hours earlier, analysts were predicting a rapid rebound in May seat capacity; instead, OAG now estimates a further 15 percent reduction week-on-week. Gulf carriers have asked insurers to clarify war-risk coverage, while finance teams brace for volatility in forward bookings. For mobility professionals, the key takeaway is preparedness. Employers should 1) review alternative routings via Doha or Riyadh, 2) pre-approve higher-fare, longer-duration tickets, and 3) remind assignees that UAE-issued resident visas remain valid even if flights enter through Oman or Saudi Arabia before transiting by land. With the NOTAM window running at least to 11 May, contingency planning will remain essential for the coming week.
