India’s largest airline IndiGo reels under massive flight disruptions as over 1,000 flights stand cancelled in four days, stranding thousands at airports from Delhi to Bengaluru. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation made a sharp U-turn Friday, easing crew rest rules and issuing an urgent appeal to pilots for cooperation after new Flight Duty Time Limitations norms triggered the chaos. Delhi airport saw 225 cancellations alone Friday morning, with Mumbai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad each logging over 100 as passengers vent frustration over poor communication and delays.
The crisis erupted Tuesday, snowballing into the fourth day with IndiGo blaming a mix of tech glitches, bad weather, airport congestion and struggles implementing Phase 2 of the FDTL rules effective November 1. These norms cap night duty hours and pilot-in-command needs, but IndiGo admitted misjudging crew requirements, leading to widespread rostering gaps. Over 600 flights were axed by Thursday, pushing the on-time performance to a dismal 67.7% in November from 84.1% earlier, with Friday adding hundreds more including 102 at Bengaluru, 104 at Mumbai and 92 at Hyderabad.
Passengers faced mayhem at key hubs. In Delhi, crowds swelled as 135 departures and 90 arrivals got scrubbed, prompting the airport to warn travellers to check status beforehand. A bride-to-be at one terminal lamented missing a wedding, calling it a “total mess” with no airline updates despite early arrivals. Pune logged 32 cancellations plus a diversion to Hyderabad, Chandigarh 15 cuts and Goa 11, while a Jeddah passenger extended his stay only to face further delays to Silchar without food or hotel aid.
DGCA Eases Rules, Appeals for Pilot Support as IndiGo Seeks February Normalcy:
The DGCA swung into action with a “temporary one-time extension” retracting the November 1 FDTL changes that banned substituting weekly pilot rest with accumulated leave. This gives IndiGo flexibility to rebuild rosters amid shortages, alongside a conditional exemption letting pilots handle up to six night landings instead of two, and dropping the two consecutive night duty cap. The relaxations run until February 10, 2026, with reviews every 15 days, as IndiGo assured full stability by then after requesting exemptions for its A320 fleet.
Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu reviewed the mess Thursday, slamming IndiGo for poor planning despite prior notice on norms and directing DGCA for real-time inspections at major airports. The regulator summoned airline brass to explain disruptions and mitigation plans, stressing passenger support from Airports Authority of India and others. IndiGo issued a second apology Friday, regretting impacts on customers and stakeholders while crediting Ministry of Civil Aviation, DGCA, BCAS and airport teams for help in curbing the cascade.
With 2,300 daily flights and a 60% domestic market share, IndiGo said that their single Airbus A320 fleet plan, which was intended to save costs, was now revealing flaws in crew training and spare parts. The Federation of Indian Pilots blames non-poaching agreements and pay freezes that other carriers were able to avoid for the upcoming cuts, which will result in reduced services after December 8. Rahul Gandhi criticized the government’s “monopoly model” for trapping common Indians, while Shiv Sena MP Priyanka Chaturvedi called on Naidu to make a speech before the Rajya Sabha.
Passenger Fury Mounts, Government Pushes for Quick Fix:
Stranded flyers flooded social media and terminals with complaints of zero communication, forcing some to miss critical events. One man from Jeddah described limbo with no IndiGo staff response on basics like meals, underscoring service breakdowns at a carrier passengers rely on heavily. Airports like Delhi urged direct airline checks, but many arrived early only to learn of axed flights last-minute.
DGCA’s appeal targeted all pilot bodies and individuals for “full cooperation” to restore schedules, amid probes into IndiGo’s winter planning that overlooked new rest rules. The airline promised “calibrated adjustments” over 48 hours from Thursday but warned of ongoing pain, with full refunds for December 5-15 cancellations as a sop. Naidu’s directives include strict monitoring of passenger handling and timely alerts during woes.
As IndiGo grapples, the episode spotlights aviation’s tight margins where norm shifts hit hardest. With over 400 flights chopped Friday alone, pressure builds for swift recovery, but February’s horizon leaves travellers bracing for weeks of uncertainty. Government intervention offers breathing room, yet flyers demand accountability from the dominant player whose missteps ripple nationwide.




