British Airways Middle East Rebooking: Extended to May 2026

British Airways has extended its Middle East rebooking window to 31 May 2026. Here is what the updated waiver means for affected passengers and Avios holders.

British Airways Middle East Rebooking Extended to May 2026

Published 16 March 2026 — verified from British Airways official sources and independent aviation reporting

British Airways has extended the travel window on its Middle East waiver to 31 May 2026, replacing the previous 29 March cutoff. For passengers and Avios holders with affected bookings, this means you can now rebook to depart on any date up to 31 May — or request a full refund. You do not need to act immediately. This article explains exactly what the extension means, which routes are affected, what your Avios rights are, and what is happening on the ground today.

Which Routes Are Affected

BA suspended its Middle East network on 28 February 2026 following the regional airspace closures. New bookings to Dubai, Amman, Bahrain and Tel Aviv are suspended until at least 16 April 2026. Doha has no fixed restart date as it depends on Qatari airspace reopening. Abu Dhabi is the most severely affected — flights are suspended until later in 2026 with no specific date confirmed.

Abu Dhabi
Suspended until later in 2026
Dubai
No bookings until 16 April 2026
Doha
Suspended — dependent on Qatari airspace reopening
Amman, Bahrain, Tel Aviv
No bookings until 16 April 2026

What the Extended Window Means

It is worth being clear about what “rebooking window” actually means — because airlines use the term in two different ways and the distinction matters.

A travel window is the latest date your rebooked flight must actually depart. A rebooking deadline is the date by which you must have actioned the change to your booking. These are completely different things, and confusing them can leave passengers thinking they have more or less flexibility than they actually do.

In BA’s current Middle East waiver, the 31 May 2026 date refers to the travel window — meaning you can rebook your cancelled or affected flight to any new departure date up to and including 31 May 2026. If your original flight was to Dubai in March, you could rebook it to a new flight in April or May and have that departure date sit within the waiver window.

In practical terms this is quite generous. It means you do not need to commit to new travel dates immediately — you have time to monitor the regional situation before deciding when to rebook. If the situation improves and services resume, you can rebook to a date that suits you. If it does not, you can request a refund instead.

Rebooking is free of charge provided any fare difference is paid and the new booking remains on BA-operated flights. There is no refund if the new booking is cheaper than the original fare paid. Changes of origin or destination airport are permitted within the waiver, provided any fare difference is covered.

✦ Important

The 31 May travel window gives you considerably more time to wait and see how the regional situation develops before committing to new travel dates. You do not need to rebook immediately — but do check ba.com regularly as waiver terms can change, and do not voluntarily cancel your booking before confirming the airline has cancelled your flight first.

Partner Airline Options

Where BA cannot operate the original route, the airline can rebook affected passengers onto a range of partner carriers. The confirmed partner airlines available for rebooking are Air France, Lufthansa, SWISS, Iberia, Scandinavian Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, American Airlines, Oman Air, Royal Jordanian (Amman only), EL AL and Finnair. Malaysia Airlines and Cathay Pacific options are available only until 30 April.

This is a meaningful list — particularly Oman Air, which has been operating an expanded network through Muscat as an alternative Gulf hub throughout the disruption period. If your original routing was through Dubai or Abu Dhabi, an Oman Air reroute via Muscat may be the most practical alternative for onward travel to South Asia or East Africa.

What Avios Holders Need to Know

Avios reward bookings on affected BA routes are explicitly included under the waiver. If BA has cancelled your flight, you are entitled to a full refund of Avios and any cash fees paid. This applies regardless of the fare type or cabin class originally booked.

If you choose to rebook rather than refund, the 31 May window applies to Avios bookings in the same way as cash fares — you can move your travel date within that window free of charge, subject to Avios availability on your new dates.

One important distinction: if you used Avios to book a flight operated by a partner airline — Qatar Airways, for example — you must contact The British Airways Club directly rather than the operating carrier. BA issued the ticket, so BA processes the refund or rebooking. The operating airline cannot amend or refund tickets issued through a partner programme.

To request a refund or rebook an Avios ticket, use Manage My Booking on ba.com in the first instance. If the online system does not process your request, contact The British Airways Club directly and reference the Middle East disruption waiver.

BA Dubai Flights Cancelled 2026: Repatriation and Current Status

British Airways operated a series of repatriation flights from Muscat, Oman, to London Heathrow between 5 and 12 March to assist British nationals stranded in the UAE. The final repatriation flight from Muscat operated on 12 March 2026. No further rescue flights are currently planned.

Passengers currently in affected countries who have not yet made arrangements to return should contact BA directly on the dedicated Middle East assistance line. The FCDO also recommends that British nationals in the UAE register their presence at gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice to receive direct security and travel updates.

The situation at Dubai International Airport deteriorated further on 16 March 2026 when a drone attack struck a fuel tank in the vicinity of the airport, sparking a fire and forcing a suspension of all flights from 6.30am local time. Dozens of flights were diverted to Al Maktoum International Airport and a number of inbound services were turned back to their origin airports. Dubai Civil Aviation Authority confirmed the temporary suspension as a precautionary measure. Emirates restarted a limited flight schedule after 10am local time once the fire was contained, but a number of flights from the day’s schedule were cancelled. It is the fourth drone-related incident to affect Dubai International Airport since the conflict began on 28 February.

British Airways Rebooking Rights UK: What to Do Now

If your BA flight to an affected destination has been cancelled, request a full refund or rebook via Manage My Booking at ba.com. Do not cancel your booking yourself before confirming the airline has cancelled — a voluntary cancellation may not qualify for the full waiver terms.

If you have an upcoming booking within the waiver window, you now have until 31 May 2026 to rebook. Consider waiting for the regional situation to become clearer before committing to new dates if your travel is not time-sensitive.

If you booked through a travel agent or OTA, contact your agent first — BA processes refunds through the original booking channel. If your agent is unresponsive, contact BA directly with your booking reference.

If you have an Avios booking, use Manage My Booking first. If the online system does not process your Avios refund or rebooking, call The British Airways Club and reference the Middle East disruption waiver explicitly.

If you have a 2-4-1 companion voucher attached to a cancelled booking, contact The British Airways Club directly to discuss your options. There is no guaranteed policy on voucher reinstatement during disruptions — BA considers these on a case by case basis and there is no obligation to extend. It is worth asking, but do not assume reinstatement will be granted.

✓ TAKEAWAY

BA has extended the Middle East rebooking window to 31 May 2026 — use it. Do not cancel your own booking before the airline does. Avios bookings are covered under the waiver. Partner airline bookings must be managed through The British Airways Club, not the operating carrier. Always verify the current waiver terms at ba.com before acting, as the position is being updated regularly.

Published 16 March 2026. Waiver terms are subject to change — always verify the current position directly at ba.com before taking any action. This article does not constitute legal or financial advice.

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