Quick Facts
- Reopened: April 8, 2026
- Duration of closure: 40 days (late February – April 8)
- Airports reopened: Baghdad, Erbil, Basra, Najaf
- Daily overflights before closure: ~800
- Transit fee per overflight: $450
- Daily revenue lost: $360,000
- Total estimated revenue loss: $14.4 million
- Trigger for closure: U.S.-Iran conflict, regional missile exchanges
Why Iraq Closed Its Airspace
The closure began when the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran escalated into a broader regional conflict in late February 2026. Iran retaliated with ballistic missile and drone attacks on targets across the Gulf, and Iraq — caught geographically between the belligerents — found its airspace suddenly too dangerous for civilian traffic. The risk was not theoretical. Missiles were crossing Iraqi airspace. Air defence systems were active. Military aircraft from multiple nations were operating in or near Iraqi territory. For civilian aviation authorities, the calculus was simple: the liability of a misidentified airliner, a stray missile, or an electronic warfare incident was too high. The skies were shut. The memory of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 — shot down over eastern Ukraine in 2014 by a surface-to-air missile — looms over every decision like this. No aviation authority wants to be the one that kept its airspace open and paid the price.
The Cost of Forty Empty Days
Iraq sits at a crossroads of global air traffic. Routes between Europe and the Gulf, South Asia, and East Africa pass through Iraqi airspace. Before the closure, approximately 800 aircraft transited Iraqi skies every day, each paying a $450 overflight fee. That is $360,000 in daily revenue — roughly $14.4 million over the 40-day closure. But the direct revenue loss is the smallest part of the cost. Airlines forced to reroute around Iraq burned more fuel, flew longer sectors, and in some cases cancelled routes entirely. The detours added time and expense to flights between Europe and destinations like Dubai, Mumbai, and Singapore. Some carriers absorbed the cost. Others passed it to passengers. For Iraqi airlines, the closure was devastating. Iraqi Airways, the national carrier, was grounded entirely for domestic and international services. Airport workers, ground handlers, fuel suppliers, and the entire ecosystem of jobs that depends on functioning airports went without income.What the Reopening Signals
The Iraqi Joint Operations Command stated that airport operations would restart following the completion of technical and security measures to ensure safe air navigation. The Civil Aviation Authority emphasised coordination with international aviation organisations and said it would issue updated flight schedules and operational guidance. The careful, procedural language masks a geopolitical signal. Reopening airspace requires confidence that the shooting has stopped — or at least that it has moved far enough away to make civilian operations safe. The fact that Iraq felt comfortable reopening on April 8 suggests that the ceasefire dynamics in the region have shifted meaningfully. Travellers were advised to check directly with airlines for the latest flight information, a reminder that reopening the airspace is not the same as returning to normal. Schedules need to be rebuilt. Crew rotations restarted. Maintenance that was deferred during the closure needs to be completed. The return to full operations will take weeks, not days.
A Corridor the World Needs
Iraqi airspace is not optional for global aviation. It is a corridor that connects continents. Its closure forced the industry to improvise at scale, and every day it remained shut added cost and complexity to a system that was already strained by the broader Middle East crisis. The reopening does not mean the crisis is over. Iran’s airspace remains restricted. The Strait of Hormuz is still contested. Jet fuel prices have surged. But having Iraqi skies open again removes one of the most painful bottlenecks, and for the airlines that depend on those routes, it is the first piece of genuinely good news in weeks. Eight hundred aircraft a day will start crossing again. The transit fees will flow. And for the passengers aboard those flights, the empty skies below will fill up once more — quietly, routinely, as if nothing had happened at all.Sources: Iraqi News, Iraq Business News, Airline Ratings, Travel and Tour World, Rudaw
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