Air France is pausing Dubai service while KLM halts flights to Tel Aviv, Dubai, Dammam, and Riyadh and adjusts regional airspace routing.
Air France and KLM have suspended a range of passenger services to Middle East destinations, with Air France temporarily stopping flights to Dubai and KLM pausing multiple routes to cities in Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia.
Air France said it is suspending its Dubai service while it monitors the broader geopolitical situation in the region, adding that it is tracking developments in real time and will update its schedule as conditions evolve.
KLM halted flights until further notice to Tel Aviv, Dubai, Dammam, and Riyadh, and indicated it will avoid flying through the airspace of Iraq, Iran, Israel, and several countries in the Gulf as part of its operational planning.
The operational changes extend beyond destination suspensions to routing decisions, signaling that airspace selection has become a central factor alongside city-by-city service decisions for carriers managing schedules in the region.
The provided details do not include passenger guidance such as rebooking policies, refund options, or the scope of affected flight numbers, leaving the immediate customer impact to be managed through airline-specific schedule updates and service notices.
The flight disruptions were reported in a context of heightened U.S. military posture rhetoric, after U.S. President
Donald Trump said a “big force” of U.S. warships he described as an “armada” was heading toward the Gulf region.
Confirmed vs unclear: What is confirmed is Air France has temporarily suspended service to Dubai and KLM has suspended flights to Tel Aviv, Dubai, Dammam, and Riyadh while avoiding several regional airspaces; what’s still unclear is how long the suspensions will remain in effect and the specific reason KLM cited internally for the change.
For aviation networks, the immediate operational mechanics implied by the changes are straightforward: carriers can reduce exposure by pausing select routes, tightening route planning around restricted or avoided airspace, and issuing rolling schedule revisions as the situation develops.
In the near term, the story remains centered on service status—what routes are paused, what airspace is being avoided, and when airlines plan to resume—rather than on any single definitive endpoint for the disruptions.
As carriers reassess routings and schedules, the practical takeaway for travelers is that services to several Middle East destinations are currently suspended by Air France and KLM, with further schedule adjustments possible as airlines continue to monitor conditions.