FCDO airspace closure warnings mean flights can be delayed, diverted, or cancelled with very little notice. Current GOV.UK advice shows the clearest disruption in Iran, Iraq, Israel and Palestine, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Lebanon, Cyprus, Azerbaijan, and Pakistan, with wider global disruption also flagged for many other destinations.
Travellers should check the latest country page, follow airline updates, and review departure plans before they travel. FCDO says advice can change quickly, and support can be limited in a crisis or in places where it already advises against travel.
What an FCDO airspace closure warning means
FCDO travel advice is official government guidance for British nationals. It gives objective information about risk, and it can advise against travel to a whole country or only part of it. The advice is updated when the security situation changes. FCDO also says travel insurance can be invalidated if someone travels against its advice.
An airspace closure warning does not always mean every airport is shut. In many cases, it means flights may be stopped, rerouted, delayed, or restricted because of regional conflict, missile activity, drone activity, or other security risks. FCDO pages also show that some countries face direct airspace disruption, while others are affected by wider regional tension and travel disruption.
You can also read how global industrial shutdowns affect supply chains in detail in the case of the Nissan Oppama Plant Closure, which shows how unexpected operational stoppages can disrupt international logistics and transport planning.
Countries currently affected
| Country or region | Current FCDO warning | What it means for travellers |
|---|---|---|
| Iran | Iranian airspace remains closed, and land borders may have restrictions and may close at short notice. | Do not assume normal flight or border access. Check exit options early. |
| Iraq | FCDO advises against all travel to Federal Iraq and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq because of recent regional conflict escalation. | Travel plans can change fast, and consular support is severely limited. |
| Israel and Palestine | FCDO advises against all travel to Israel and Palestine. The advice page also flags regional escalation. | Expect possible border and airport disruption, especially during periods of conflict. |
| Jordan | Jordanian airspace has been affected by the regional conflict, and closures may be announced with little notice. | Check with your airline before travel and keep departure plans under review. |
| Saudi Arabia | Commercial travel options remain available, but there have been temporary closures of airspace across Saudi Arabia. | Use airline updates and local authority advice before moving to an airport. |
| Bahrain | Airspace reopened after a closure, but limited flights remain and further closures or restrictions may still happen at short notice. | Keep plans flexible and be ready for sudden changes. |
| Kuwait | Kuwait airspace has reopened, and some flights have restarted, but travel disruption remains part of the current advice. | Review flight status often and follow local instructions. |
| Lebanon | FCDO advises against all travel to parts of Lebanon and against all but essential travel to other parts. The page also says regional escalation has led to travel disruption. | Some routes may stay open, but the security picture can shift quickly. |
| Cyprus | Regional escalation has led to travel disruption, and travellers are told to keep departure plans under review. | Even nearby safe routes can be affected by wider regional events. |
| Azerbaijan | FCDO says escalation could lead to travel disruption, including airspace closures. | Watch for short notice changes, especially if travelling through the region. |
| Pakistan | FCDO notes that regional tensions in May 2025 caused sustained airspace closures, airline suspensions, and restricted domestic travel. | This shows how quickly regional tensions can affect flight access and internal movement. |
Similar disruption patterns can also be seen in non-aviation sectors, such as retail and hospitality, highlighted by the Costa Coffee Greengates Closure, which reflects how sudden closures impact consumer access and local operations.
Wider countries also carrying the same travel disruption warning
FCDO also uses the same global warning on many country pages outside the Middle East. These include India, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Thailand, the Philippines, South Korea, Georgia, Uzbekistan, Fiji, and the Federated States of Micronesia. The message is the same across these pages. Escalation in the Middle East has caused widespread travel disruption, including airspace closures, delayed flights, and cancelled flights.
This is important because a journey can be affected even when the destination is far from the Middle East. A traveller may be flying over a disrupted route, connecting through a busy hub, or relying on an airline schedule that changes after an airspace closure somewhere else. FCDO warns that travel plans may be affected even if the final destination is not in the Middle East.
What travellers should do before leaving
The first step is to check the FCDO travel advice page for every country on the route, not just the final destination. That includes transit points, stopovers, and any place where you may need to change planes. FCDO specifically tells travellers to check advice for any countries or territories they are transiting through, to check the latest updates from the airline or tour operator, and to review insurance cover before travel.
Travellers should also sign up for FCDO email alerts on the relevant country page. FCDO says its advice may change quickly, and its crisis guidance says people should follow UK government advice, follow local authorities, and keep sensible precautions in mind when travelling in higher-risk areas.
What to do if you are already abroad
If you are already in an affected country, keep your departure plans under review and keep your travel documents up to date. FCDO says people in Saudi Arabia should be prepared to change plans quickly and should have a personal emergency plan that does not depend on UK government support. Similar advice appears on Bahrain, Jordan, Cyprus, Kuwait, and Azerbaijan pages, where travellers are told to monitor local and international media, follow local authority instructions, and stay alert to fast changes.
If local authorities tell you to shelter, stay indoors and move to the safest nearby place available. FCDO guidance for Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia gives the same basic safety advice, including staying away from debris and following sirens or local alerts. In Kuwait and Bahrain, the advice also says to use the nearest safe building or designated shelter, and to stay away from drone or missile fragments.
When travel should be reconsidered
Travel should be reconsidered when FCDO advises against all travel or all but essential travel, because the risk level is already judged to be high. FCDO says it only gives that advice when the risk to British nationals is unacceptably high, for reasons such as armed conflict, civil unrest, military coups, disease outbreaks, or natural disasters. The warnings can apply to a whole country or only part of it.
This matters because the support available in a crisis may be limited, especially in places where FCDO already advises against travel. The crisis guidance says the FCDO may open hotlines, registration tools, and other support channels, but it also says large-scale incidents are hard to predict and support can be very limited. In some cases, embassy staff may be withdrawn for safety reasons.
Where to check for live updates
The safest source is the FCDO country page for the place you plan to visit or transit through. Those pages show the current warnings, the latest update date, and any country-specific advice on airspace, airports, borders, or sheltering in place. FCDO also provides email alerts on each country page, and its general travel advice page explains that it keeps advice updated and removes warnings when the situation allows.
Airline and tour operator updates matter too, because airspace closures can happen faster than published timetables can be changed. FCDO’s current advice repeatedly tells travellers to check with airlines before moving, to monitor local media, and to follow instructions from local authorities. That is the best way to avoid being caught by a sudden cancellation, diversion, or border closure.







