Fri. Apr 3rd, 2026

Restrictions eased on outbound flights


The number of passengers permitted on outbound flights will be increased starting Saturday night to up to 80 passengers per flight. This was decided today by the Ministry of Transport following a security assessment. So far, as part of the restrictions imposed on Ben Gurion Airport’s operations, the quota has been limited to only 50 passengers on each departing flight.

Unlike outbound flights, no similar limit has been imposed on the number of passengers on incoming flights. The reason for this lies in the operational differences between landing and takeoff. The time for landing and disembarkation of passengers from the plane is significantly shorter, while the security check process before takeoff is longer. In addition, when an aircraft is on the ground, it is particularly vulnerable during any alert, and therefore the policy is to reduce the length of time the plane stays on the ground as much as possible.







How will this affect passengers?

Currently, only Israeli airlines operate at Ben Gurion Airport, while a NOTAM, which was published by Israel’s Civil Aviation Authority alongside regulatory recommendations from the EU and US international aviation bodies, continues to discourage foreign carriers from resuming operations to and from Israel.

Even among Israeli airlines, activity is far from routine. The restrictions imposed do not only concern the number of passengers on each flight, but also the number of aircraft allowed to land and take off (one per hour), and therefore regular schedules have been canceled, while reduced and flexible schedules have been implemented, which are built according to demand and operating capacity and security restrictions.

For example, El Al has announced the cancellation of its regular flight schedule until at least April 11 and is instead operating a reduced schedule of about 15 flights a day, while reviewing the situation weekly. Israir has canceled its flight schedule until April 8, and Arkia until April 11, with both airlines revising activity in accordance with developments and restrictions.

Passengers booked on a flight with an Israeli company before the outbreak of the war will, in most cases, not fly on the original date. The old schedules have been almost completely canceled, and even on the few flights that do operate as planned, the limit on the number of passengers means that a significant portion of passengers receive cancellation notices.

Published by Globes, Israel business news – en.globes.co.il – on April 3, 2026.

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2026.


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