Since late February, airline ticket prices have surged for flights taking specific routes, exposing the uneven effects of geopolitical tensions and supply-chain disruptions in the wake of the Iran conflict. In some Asia-Europe corridors, fares have climbed to record levels, while flights between the Gulf and India are now 30-35% more expensive. Elsewhere, airlines are offering steep discounts. The contrast is telling. What was once a broadly unified global aviation market is now fragmenting along geopolitical lines.
Since late February, airlines have fundamentally changed how they price flights, with each route's position within a disrupted global network playing a decisive role. Here, geography dictates who pays more for a ticket and who travels less. This shift rests on two overlapping forces: a short-term price shock driven by fuel costs and airspace closures, and a longer-term uplift rooted in aircraft shortages, rising operating costs, and the gradual transition to more sustainable aviation fuel (SAF).
Demand/price disconnect
The data underscore the disconnect between demand and prices. In March, global passenger demand grew by just 2.1% overall, rising to about 8% outside the Middle East. Within the region, however, international demand fell by 60.8%, with capacity down by 56.9% as airspace closures and operational disruptions took hold. April air traffic between Europe and the Middle East was 50% lower than the same time last year. The drop is not due to declining demand but due to a regional bottleneck that is forcing a repricing of the entire network.
The Asia-Europe axis has become the epicentre of disruption. This corridor, long dependent on Gulf hubs for transit traffic, has lost a substantial share of its capacity. This has caused sharp price spikes with fares on some major routes rising by as much as 560% in March, while June prices were around 70% higher than a year earlier. Long-haul journeys such as Sydney to London climbed beyond $1,500—roughly double their previous levels.
Individual cases highlight the scale of the upheaval. Reuters reported that a traveller paid £1,900 (around $2,380) for a one-way ticket from the UK to Australia via Singapore—more than the cost of a previous return fare, which had been about $1,520. Fares from Hong Kong to London briefly exceeded HK$21,000 (around $2,690) before easing to around HK$5,000, while Bangkok to London tickets reached nearly THB71,000 (around $1,970) before falling back. These figures reflect more than inflation; they point to a sudden scarcity of seats, with available capacity becoming a premium commodity.


