Illustration depicting chaos at Indian airports due to IndiGo flight cancellations from crew shortages, with crowded terminals and idle planes.
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IndiGo flight cancellations persist amid crew shortage crisis

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IndiGo's flight cancellations and delays continued across major Indian airports on December 8, with 134 flights scrapped in Delhi, 127 in Bengaluru, and 112 in Hyderabad. The DGCA granted a 24-hour extension to the CEO to respond to the show-cause notice, while refunds totaling 610 crore rupees have been issued. Operations are expected to normalize by December 10.

On December 8, 2025, IndiGo cancelled around 300 flights across several Indian airports, marking the seventh day of the ongoing crisis. Delhi Airport saw 134 disruptions, including 75 departures and 59 arrivals, while Bengaluru reported 127, Hyderabad 112, Ahmedabad 20, and Visakhapatnam 7 cancellations. By 9:30 AM, 289 cancellations were confirmed.

Sunday saw over 650 flights scrapped, accounting for nearly 28% of the airline's daily 2,300 operations, with more than 1,000 cancellations over the weekend. The crisis stems primarily from the full implementation of Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) norms, resulting in a cockpit crew shortage. Officials state that refunds exceeding 610 crore rupees have been issued to affected passengers. The government intervened by capping airfares and directing faster refund processing.

Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu emphasized that pilot duty guidelines were issued a year ago, placing responsibility on the airline. The DGCA extended the deadline for CEO Pieter Elbers and manager Isidro Porqueras to respond to the show-cause notice until Monday 6 PM. Delhi Airport advised passengers: 'IndiGo flights may face delays. Check status before arriving at the airport.' IndiGo's shares tumbled 4% amid the turmoil. A high-level probe is underway, with normalization expected by December 10.

Vad folk säger

Discussions on X highlight widespread passenger frustration with IndiGo's ongoing flight cancellations and delays at major airports like Delhi, Bengaluru, and Hyderabad due to crew shortages from new DGCA rest rules. Users criticize IndiGo for poor planning despite 22 months' notice, monopoly power, and inadequate communication. Neutral reports note government interventions including a show-cause notice to the CEO (with 24-hour extension), Rs 610 crore refunds issued, fare caps, and expected normalization by December 10. Skepticism targets DGCA's rule relaxations and regulatory oversight failures.

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IndiGo airplanes on busy airport tarmac with passengers boarding as flights resume after cancellations.
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IndiGo resumes most flights after week of cancellations

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After five days of flight cancellations and delays, IndiGo operated over 1,500 flights on Sunday as DGCA issued a notice to its CEO. The civil aviation ministry imposed refund deadlines and fare caps. Passengers remain affected, but 95% of the network has been restored.

New DGCA rules have left IndiGo Airlines short of crew members, resulting in hundreds of flight cancellations over the past four days. On Friday, over 1,000 flights were cancelled, forcing passengers to wait up to 20 hours at airports. The CEO apologised and expects normal operations to resume between December 10 and 15.

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Dense fog and cold wave conditions gripped Delhi on Thursday, with visibility at Indira Gandhi International Airport falling to 50 metres. Air quality remained very poor at an AQI of 354, while minimum temperature was 5 degrees Celsius. Flight operations faced disruptions amid the foggy weather.

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