DXB Maintains Global Connectivity Amid Disruption
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Scales Up as UAE Airspace Reopens
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Airport handles 6 million passengers during crisis period
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Strong recovery expected as flight capacity gradually returns
Dubai International Airport (DXB) sustained global connectivity through a prolonged period of regional airspace disruption, handling 6 million passenger journeys, over 32,000 aircraft movements and 213,000 tonnes of cargo between February 28 and April 30, even as flight schedules and routing were significantly constrained.
The disruption, which intensified through March, affected one of the world’s most critical aviation corridors. Despite these challenges, Dubai’s airport ecosystem remained operational, adapting in real time to shifting airspace availability while maintaining safety and service continuity.
Operations stabilise as restrictions lifted
With UAE airspace now fully reopened, Dubai Airports has begun ramping up operations, increasing flight movements in line with regional routing capacity. Airlines are progressively restoring schedules, although capacity remains partly dependent on neighbouring airspace conditions.
The recovery phase is being driven through close coordination across the oneDXB network, including major carriers such as Emirates and flydubai, alongside service partners and regulatory authorities. This coordinated response enabled continued passenger and cargo movement during the disruption, while positioning the airport for a swift operational scale-up.
Critical role in global transfer traffic
Paul Griffiths, CEO of Dubai Airports, described the past weeks as unprecedented for a global hub of DXB’s scale, underlining the airport’s central role in international transit traffic.
He said “The extraordinary events of the past few weeks are unprecedented for any major airport hub such as DXB. International transfer traffic through the Middle East region accounts for a major share of the global air travel market, with 22.4 million annual passenger journeys flowing through DXB, representing one third of the transfer traffic across the region’s hubs. Maintaining the smooth operation of DXB is therefore critical to keep global journeys moving. Our focus has been on keeping operations safe and consistent for our customers through close coordination and rapid decision-making across the entire airport community and beyond, while ensuring the system remains ready to respond swiftly as conditions improve.
“Our collective response to these challenges has sharpened our ability to adapt at pace. That readiness will enable us to accommodate returning demand as capacity is restored, reinforcing DXB’s role as a leading global hub, even as some regional routing constraints remain.”
DXB accounts for a significant share of global transfer flows, with 22.4 million annual passenger journeys, roughly one-third of the Middle East’s hub transfer traffic, passing through the airport. Of the 99.3 million passengers globally whose journeys could route via the region, the Middle East captures around 70%, with DXB alone handling 32%.
As conditions stabilise, this transfer segment is expected to rebound quickly, supported by demand that cannot easily be absorbed by alternative hubs.
Q1 traffic impacted by disruption
Traffic data for the first quarter of 2026 reflects the scale of the disruption. DXB handled 18.6 million passengers, marking a 20.6% year-on-year decline, with March traffic dropping sharply by 65.7% to 2.5 million passengers.
India remained the airport’s largest market with 2.5 million passengers, followed by Saudi Arabia (1.3 million), the United Kingdom (1.2 million), and Pakistan (918,000). London retained its position as the busiest city destination with 752,000 passengers, ahead of Mumbai (520,000) and Jeddah (505,000).
Cargo volumes reached 399,600 tonnes in Q1, down 22.7%, while aircraft movements totalled 88,000, a decline of 20.8% compared to the same period last year.
Operational resilience under pressure
DXB processed 17.6 million bags during the quarter, with a mishandled baggage rate of 3.5 per 1,000 passengers—higher than last year’s 1.95 but still significantly below the global average of approximately 6.3.The airport’s ability to maintain operations under rapidly changing conditions highlights the resilience and adaptability of Dubai’s aviation sector, even amid severe external constraints.
Growth outlook remains strong
Looking ahead, Dubai Airports expects strong underlying demand to drive recovery as airspace capacity improves. Efforts are underway to unlock additional capacity across regional flight paths while maintaining operational stability.
At the same time, long-term expansion at Al Maktoum International Airport (DWC) continues, reinforcing Dubai’s strategy to strengthen its position as a leading global aviation hub.