India e-Arrival Card: Don't Get Denied Boarding
Nine days ago, we published a piece about unusually cheap Europe flights for summer 2026. Fares were down 14%. The booking window was closing, but prices were still soft.
That window didn’t just close. It shattered.
On March 14, the Iran conflict escalated into direct strikes on oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz region. Jet fuel prices jumped 60% within 72 hours. Airlines rerouting around Middle Eastern airspace lost roughly 10% of global seat capacity overnight. Planes burning extra fuel on longer routes, crews timing out earlier, connections broken. The result: fares on transatlantic and Asia-Pacific routes have surged 30–80% depending on the route, with some summer peak dates already showing triple-digit increases over last week’s prices.
If you were planning to book summer travel and didn’t lock it in before March 14, you’re now operating in a fundamentally different market.
But “different” doesn’t mean “impossible.” It means the old approach of casually browsing Kayak two months out won’t cut it. You need specific tools running specific strategies, and you need them now, before airlines finish repricing their summer inventory over the next two to four weeks.
A quick reality check on the numbers, because the situation is moving fast.
Jet fuel: West Texas-benchmarked jet fuel hit $3.84/gallon on March 17, up from $2.40/gallon on March 13. That’s the highest since the 2022 Ukraine spike. Airlines hedge fuel costs, but most carriers only hedge 40–60% of their consumption. The unhedged portion hits ticket prices within days.
Capacity loss: Airspace closures over Iran, Iraq, and parts of the Arabian Peninsula forced reroutes on hundreds of daily flights. Routes between Europe and Asia/Australia are adding 2–4 hours of flight time. Emirates, Qatar Airways, and Etihad have cancelled or consolidated flights. That capacity doesn’t magically reappear elsewhere. It’s just gone.
Fare increases so far:
These aren’t predictions. These are prices already showing on booking platforms as of March 18. And airlines haven’t finished adjusting. Summer inventory repricing typically takes two to four weeks to fully roll through fare classes.
The playbook here isn’t “find a secret cheap flight.” It’s “be the first to see deals before they disappear, lock in prices before the next adjustment, and find routing alternatives most people miss.”
What it does: Monitors fare anomalies and mistake fares across thousands of routes, then emails you when something drops significantly below normal.
Why it matters right now: Airlines reprice inventory in waves, not all at once. During volatile periods, pricing algorithms miscalculate. Fares occasionally drop to pre-crisis levels for hours (sometimes minutes) before getting corrected. Going.com’s alert system catches these faster than you can manually refresh Google Flights.
What to do:
Limitation: Going.com covers US departure airports well. International departure coverage is thinner. And it can’t create deals that don’t exist. If every carrier has repriced a route, no alert will save you.
What it does: Tracks specific routes and sends notifications when prices change. Also shows a price graph with historical fare data for context.
Why it matters right now: You need to know whether today’s $890 fare to Rome is the new floor or a temporary stop on the way to $1,200. Google Flights’ price history graph shows you the trend line. And the “Track prices” toggle sends you a notification when a tracked route changes, in either direction.
The strategy for this crisis:
Bonus: Google Flights now flags whether a fare is “low,” “typical,” or “high” relative to the route’s history. In the current market, even fares flagged “high” may be the best you’ll see for months. For more on how to use Google’s AI-powered fare tools, see our Google Flights AI features breakdown.
What it does: Uses historical data and machine learning to predict whether a fare will go up or down, then recommends “buy now” or “wait.”
Why it matters right now: Hopper’s prediction engine works well in stable markets. In a crisis-driven spike, its accuracy drops because the models are trained on normal conditions. But it still provides one useful signal: if Hopper says “buy now” with high confidence during a price surge, the algorithm has calculated that even accounting for uncertainty, waiting will cost more.
How to use it in this market:
iOS and Android. No web version.
What it does: Skiplagged finds “hidden city” fares where booking a connection through your actual destination is cheaper than booking directly. Kiwi.com builds “virtual interlining” itineraries combining tickets from multiple airlines that no single carrier sells as a package.
Why it matters right now: Capacity loss isn’t uniform. Some airports and some airlines got hit harder than others. A nonstop from JFK to London might be up 50%, but a routing through Reykjavik on Icelandair (which isn’t affected by Middle Eastern airspace closures) might be up only 15%.
Specific strategies:
Risk: Virtual interlining means separate tickets. If the first flight is delayed and you miss the second, you’re on your own. In a market with more cancellations than normal, that’s a real risk. If you go this route, build in long layovers, 5+ hours minimum.
What it does: Credit card points (Chase Ultimate Rewards, Amex Membership Rewards, Capital One Miles, Citi ThankYou) transfer to airline loyalty programs. Award ticket pricing doesn’t always track cash fare spikes in real time.
Why it matters right now: Cash fares respond to fuel costs within days. Award ticket availability responds to demand, which moves slower. There’s a lag (typically one to three weeks) where you can book award tickets at pre-crisis mileage rates even while cash fares have already spiked.
The play:
Limitation: Award seats are finite. When cash fares spike, more people try to use points. This window closes fast, probably within two weeks for popular summer routes.
This isn’t a single tool. It’s using Google Flights’ “Explore” map, Skyscanner’s “Everywhere” destination, and Kiwi.com’s radius search in combination.
The method:
Who this works for: People with flexible schedules and open-ended destination preferences. If you must be in Barcelona on specific dates, this won’t help much. If you want “somewhere in Europe, sometime in June,” you’ll find the routes where pricing is still reasonable.
Book it. Seriously.
If you’re booking summer flights in the middle of a geopolitical crisis that could escalate further, you need trip cancellation coverage that includes “cancel for any reason” (CFAR). Standard policies exclude war and military action. CFAR policies cost more (typically 40-60% of the base insurance price on top) but they let you cancel and recover 50-75% of your trip cost regardless of reason.
We covered the war exclusion issue in travel insurance in detail last week. Read that before you buy any policy. The short version: most standard policies won’t cover cancellations related to the Iran conflict unless your specific flight is cancelled by the airline. CFAR is the only reliable safety net.
Today through March 22: Search and set up alerts on every tool listed above. The fare repricing wave is still rolling through airline inventory systems. Some routes haven’t been fully adjusted yet.
March 22 through April 5: This is your booking window. Airlines will have completed their initial repricing, but award seat inventory won’t be fully pulled yet. Lock in the best cash fare or award redemption you find. Don’t wait for a better deal. In a supply-constrained market, prices don’t dip.
After April 5: Summer peak pricing takes over on top of the crisis surcharge. If you haven’t booked by then, expect to pay 40-60% more than pre-crisis rates for the same seats.
The one exception: If the geopolitical situation de-escalates significantly (a ceasefire, airspace reopenings) fuel prices could drop and some fare relief might follow within two to four weeks. But betting your summer vacation budget on Middle East peace negotiations is not a strategy.
Not every route got hit equally. A few bright spots as of March 18:
For travelers already dealing with Middle East-related disruptions, our rebooking action plan for the UAE airspace crisis covers the immediate steps for rerouting and refunds.
A few strategies that worked two weeks ago but are now useless:
The March 10 booking window for cheap Europe flights is gone. The market shifted fundamentally on March 14, and prices aren’t coming back to pre-crisis levels anytime soon.
But “expensive” and “unaffordable” aren’t the same thing. The six tools above (Going.com for alerts, Google Flights for tracking, Hopper for price freezes, Skiplagged/Kiwi for alternative routings, points transfers for award bookings, and flexible search for undiscovered deals) give you the best chance of finding fares that haven’t fully caught up to the new reality.
Set them up today. Book by early April. And if you’re comparing Google Flights vs. Skyscanner for your search, use both. Each surfaces deals the other misses, and in this market, you need every edge.
Prices and availability cited are from March 18, 2026, and are changing rapidly. Verify current fares before booking. Fuel prices and airspace access may shift as the geopolitical situation develops.