Etihad Airways launched its inaugural direct service between Abu Dhabi and Salalah on May 21, 2026, adding Abu Dhabi to the list of UAE hubs with direct access to Oman’s southern coastal city during the khareef monsoon season. Initially operating two weekly frequencies, the service expands to five flights per week from June 15 — reflecting strong advance booking demand from UAE residents seeking cooler temperatures during the Gulf’s hot summer. The Etihad launch adds Abu Dhabi connectivity to a destination historically dominated by flydubai and Oman Air, creating competition for what has become one of the most sought-after Gulf summer escape routes as the khareef transforms Salalah’s Dhofar coast into a lush, green landscape strikingly different from the surrounding desert.
June 5 UAE Aviation Disruption: 227 Delays, 15 Cancellations in One Day
The Etihad Salalah launch came against the backdrop of the most significant aviation disruption event in recent UAE history. On June 5, 2026, a combination of altered airspace routing requirements, peak-period congestion, and operational pressures produced 227 flight delays and 15 complete cancellations across UAE airports within a single 24-hour period — affecting FlyDubai, Emirates, Etihad, Air Arabia, and other carriers simultaneously. Passengers across multiple airlines experienced delays of several hours, with some flights rerouted to alternative UAE airports to manage congestion. The scale of the June 5 disruption was exceptional: while UAE carriers have managed periodic disruption events, the simultaneous impact across all major UAE carriers in a single day was unprecedented in recent operating history.
UAE Carriers Adapt: Regional Leisure Routes as a Resilience Strategy
UAE airlines are responding to the challenging 2026 operating environment by actively expanding regional leisure routes that are less affected by the disruption factors hitting long-haul operations. The Etihad Salalah launch is one of several new regional route additions by UAE carriers in the May-June 2026 period, collectively expanding connectivity to destinations including Muscat, Amman, and select Eastern Mediterranean cities via standard routing unaffected by current airspace complexities. The strategic logic is straightforward: UAE residents with leisure travel intent represent a large, accessible demand base; regional destinations within 3-4 hours satisfy that intent with shorter routing distances and less exposure to the international airspace complications affecting some long-haul routes. With khareef season attracting over 100,000 Gulf visitors to Salalah annually, the timing of the Etihad launch positions the airline well for the peak demand period through September.



