Indian aviation carrier IndiGo has prolonged its suspension of flights to four Central Asian destinations through March 28, 2026, citing ongoing regional instability surrounding Iranian airspace. The airline’s decision directly responds to escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran and the United States that have prompted significant airspace restrictions.
The affected routes include services to Tbilisi (Georgia), Almaty (Kazakhstan), Baku (Azerbaijan), and Tashkent (Uzbekistan), all regions experiencing operational impacts due to current airspace limitations. Initially suspending these routes until February 28, the airline has now extended cancellations for an additional month amid continuing uncertainty.
In an official travel advisory distributed via social media platform X, IndiGo emphasized that “the safety and well-being of our customers and crew remain our highest priority.” The carrier committed to continuously monitoring the developing situation while implementing necessary schedule adjustments to minimize passenger disruption.
The extension coincides with heightened military preparations in the region. According to Reuters, the United States has deployed a second aircraft carrier group to the Middle East, with the USS Gerald R. Ford and accompanying vessels being redirected from the Caribbean. This movement follows the earlier January deployment of the USS Abraham Lincoln and several guided-missile destroyers to the area.
President Donald Trump addressed the escalating situation on February 12, stating that the United States “has to make a deal” with Iran within the coming month, warning that failure to do so would prove “very traumatic.”
IndiGo has advised affected passengers to visit their dedicated contingency planning webpage (goindigo.in/plan-b.html) to explore alternative travel arrangements or request full refunds. The airline maintains that schedule reviews will continue as regional developments evolve.









