British Airways trims Middle East flights but boosts India capacity for Summer 2026
British Airways announced to extend temporary schedule reductions across the Middle East while offering more frequencies to parts of India for the Northern Summer 2026 season.
The carrier names ongoing regional uncertainty and airspace instability, while continuing to monitor the situation and proactively re-book affected passengers.
From London Heathrow to Bangalore, the carrier is upgrading capacity and frequency from June 1, 2026, with BA119/118 switching from the 777-200ER to the 787-8, alongside the launch of a second daily service, BA131/130, also operated by the 787-8, with some flights seeing the 787-9. This effectively boosts the airline’s footprint on the route despite wider regional adjustments.
On the London Heathrow–Delhi corridor, frequencies temporarily increase from two to three daily flights between April 6 and May 31, 2026, with the additional BA137/136 rotation operated by the 787-8. From June 1, BA143/142 transitions earlier than planned to the Airbus A350-1000, replacing the 777-200ER and bringing a more modern long-haul product onto the route ahead of the previously scheduled October rollout.
The third daily London Heathrow–Mumbai service (BA199/198) sees a shorter suspension window, now running from May 9 to May 14, 2026, instead of the previously planned extension to May 29, with the 777-200ER continuing to operate remaining frequencies.
Cuts remain for the Middle East
However, capacity cuts are more visible across the Gulf. London Heathrow–Doha resumes from July 1, 2026, with a single daily 777-200ER, down from the previously planned double daily mix of 777 and 787 services.
Similarly, London Heathrow–Dubai is reduced to one daily 787-9 from the same date, compared to three daily flights previously operated by a mix of widebody aircraft.
Further reductions include in Saudi Arabia the complete cancellation of London Heathrow–Jeddah services from April 25, 2026, with all 787-8 and 787-9 operations removed from the schedule through 2026 and 2027.
London Heathrow–Riyadh service is also scaled back, with reservations reopening from May 20, 2026, at four weekly 777 flights instead of a double daily operation. From July 1, this is further streamlined to a single daily 787-9 service.
Overall, British Airways is balancing selective growth in India with a cautious pullback in the Middle East, adjusting capacity and aircraft deployment in response to evolving geopolitical conditions while maintaining network flexibility.
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