Commercial flights resume for the first time since the conflict with the US and Israel began about two months ago.
Published On 25 Apr 2026
Iran has resumed commercial flights from the capital Tehranâs international airport for the first time since the United States and Israel attacked the country two months ago.
Iranâs state-run television reported that flights for Istanbul, Muscat and the Saudi Arabian city of Medina took off from Tehranâs Imam Khomeini International Airport on Saturday.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 itemsend of list
Iranâs state-owned carrier, Iran Air, operated its inaugural flight from Tehran to the second-largest city of Mashhad after a 56-day hiatus, state-run IRNA news service said in a series of Telegram posts, adding that more flights are scheduled for Baku, Najaf, Baghdad and Doha in the coming days.
Mohammad Amirani, CEO of the Iran Airports and Air Navigation Company, said the countryâs eastern side â which borders Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan â will be prioritised for domestic and transit flights.
Provincial airports, including Mashhad, Zahedan, Kerman, Yazd and Birjand, are slated to become nodes for directing air traffic, IRNA said. Authorities said they had started consultations with foreign airlines to clarify routes and to re-attract transit flights as a fragile ceasefire with the US continues, while efforts for more talks between Tehran and Washington continue in Pakistan.
The US-Israel war on Iran roiled international air travel for weeks, forcing much of the Middle Eastâs airspace to shut down and leaving tens of thousands of travellers scrambling to return home.
Even as dozens of countries organised chartered flights to repatriate their citizens, their efforts were stymied by the near-shutdown of commercial aviation in one of the worldâs busiest regions for air travel.
Countries including Qatar and the United Arab Emirates partially reopened their airspaces days after attacks began on February 28, with schedules further expanding in the weeks that followed.
The ongoing blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, meanwhile, has triggered the prospect of a mounting jet fuel crisis. The European Union is considering jet fuel imports from the US, alongside new minimum reserve quotas, amid a pending supply crunch.
The head of the International Energy Agency Fatih Birol warned earlier this month that Europe has âmaybe six weeks or so [of] jet fuel leftâ and that flight cancellations could commence âsoonâ without a shift in supplies.
German aviation company Lufthansa Group on Thursday said it would slash 20,000 short-haul flights until October amid rising oil prices and fears of jet fuel shortages.
