Singapore Airlines Extends Dubai Suspension Through May as Regional Carriers Slash Routes Across Asia
Singapore Airlines has extended the suspension of flights between its hub at Changi Airport and Dubai International Airport through May 31, 2026, citing ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. The carrier’s SQ494/SQ495 route, which previously operated daily, joins a growing list of Asian airlines reducing exposure to volatile corridors across the region.
According to data compiled by travel industry monitors, airlines across Asia cancelled or delayed more than 4,700 flights over the past week, with Singapore Airlines, Emirates, AirAsia, SpiceJet, Garuda Indonesia, and Malaysia Airlines all affected. Routes connecting China, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, India, the UAE, and Singapore have seen the most disruption.
Broader Route Reductions Reshaping Commercial Air Travel
The Dubai suspension is not an isolated event. Fiji Airways has suspended a major route, Virgin Australia is cutting capacity by one percent and suspending several regional routes including Adelaide to Cairns and Alice Springs to Brisbane starting in July. Qantas has reduced domestic flights and raised fares in response to fuel cost pressures.
Lufthansa Group, meanwhile, has announced the cancellation of 20,000 flights across its network as part of a fuel conservation strategy, a move that signals broader structural adjustments among European carriers navigating the same cost pressures hitting carriers worldwide.
European carriers serving UAE routes remain subject to an EASA bulletin suspension, with the next review scheduled for May 1, 2026. FlyDubai, Air Arabia, Gulf Fly Airlines, and other regional carriers have collectively cancelled more than 30 flights across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Sharjah, disrupting connections to Bahrain, Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Dhaka, Jeddah, and Doha.
What Travel Merchants and Operators Need to Watch
For businesses that rely on air cargo and commercial passenger traffic through Gulf and Asian hubs, the pattern is worth tracking closely. Dubai International Airport (DXB) remains open and operational, but the cascading effect of reduced belly cargo capacity, fewer scheduling options, and rising fuel surcharges is creating a more complex booking environment.
Airlines including Qantas, Virgin Australia, Singapore Airlines, and Vietnam Airlines have all moved to add fuel surcharges on key routes. The combined effect of fewer flights and higher per-ticket costs narrows margin flexibility for OTAs and corporate travel managers working with fixed budgets.
Route-level data suggests the disruption spans both the busy India-Gulf corridor and the Asia-Pacific feeder routes that feed into major international hubs. Operators managing multi-leg itineraries for clients should build in additional buffer time and maintain direct communication with airline partners on rebooking options as schedule changes continue to come in.
The situation remains fluid. The next EASA review on May 1 could either lift the European carrier suspension or extend it, depending on how the geopolitical picture evolves. Industry observers note that Singapore Airlines’ decision to lock in its Dubai suspension through the end of May suggests the carrier does not anticipate a near-term resolution.
Travel businesses with exposure to these corridors should review their inventory management, communication protocols with corporate clients, and contingency routing options before peak summer travel periods arrive.
Sources: Travel and Tour World, 9Travel, Wego Travel Blog, AirlineGeeks
