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Apr 25, 2026
Iran Resumes Commercial Flights from Tehran Amid Fragile Ceasefire
Iran has restarted commercial flights from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport after a 56‑…
Resumption of Tehran’s International Flights After Two‑Month HaltIran announced the first commercial departures from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport since the United States and Israel struck the country in late February. The move marks a tentative step toward normalising air travel in a region that has been largely grounded for weeks.
First Flights to Istanbul, Muscat, and Medina Signal Operational RestartState‑run television confirmed that flights to Istanbul, Muscat and the Saudi city of Medina lifted off on Saturday, followed shortly by Iran Air's inaugural Tehran‑Mashhad service after a 56‑day hiatus.
Flight Schedule Expansion and Domestic Hub StrategyAccording to the Iran Airports and Air Navigation Company, the rollout will continue with additional routes to:
Baku
Najaf
Baghdad
Doha
Provincial airports slated as future traffic nodes include:
Mashhad
Zahedan
Kerman
Yazd
Birjand
Mohammad Amirani, CEO of the Iran Airports and Air Navigation Company, emphasized that the eastern corridor bordering Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan will be prioritised for both domestic and transit flights.
Regional Aviation Recovery and Geopolitical ImplicationsThe resumption comes amid a fragile cease‑fire with the United States and ongoing diplomatic talks in Pakistan. Re‑opening Tehran’s airspace could restore a critical hub for Middle‑East transit, easing the pressure on neighbouring airspaces that have been partially reopened by Qatar and the UAE.
However, the broader context remains precarious: the Strait of Hormuz blockade threatens a jet‑fuel shortage, the European Union is eyeing alternative fuel imports, and airlines such as Lufthansa have already slashed thousands of short‑haul flights due to rising oil prices.
Outlook: How Sustainable is Iran’s Air Traffic Revival?Analysts warn that the durability of the flight restart hinges on three factors:
Stability of the cease‑fire and progress in US‑Iran diplomatic talks.
Resolution of the jet‑fuel supply crunch in the region.
Successful re‑attraction of foreign carriers to use Tehran as a transit hub.
If these challenges are addressed, Tehran could regain its pre‑conflict traffic levels within months; otherwise, the aviation sector may face intermittent disruptions despite the initial flights.
#Iran
#Tehran Airport
#Iran Air
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