Airfare spike, weak rupee cloud overseas summer plans for Indians
Analytical article on how airspace closures, a weaker rupee, and rising fares are affecting the small segment of Indians who can afford overseas travel in summer 2026.
Travel · Summer 2026 analysis
For the few who fly abroad, this summer looks very different
For Indian families, the summer break has long been the season of carefully planned holidays. For those who can afford it, the annual ritual often extends beyond borders, with foreign destinations high on the wishlist. But this year, even that well-heeled segment is being forced to rethink. With Gulf war and following airspace disruptions stretching flight routes, a weakening rupee pushing up costs, and airfares climbing by the day, overseas travel is no longer as straightforward as it once was.
A note on scale: fewer than 3% of Indians hold a passport, and outbound leisure travel remains concentrated among upper-middle-class and affluent households in metros and larger cities. The trends in this article describe the behaviour of that narrow segment—not Indian travellers as a whole.
Every April, when school bells fall silent, a segment of India's urban professional class begins the familiar ritual: booking portals, passport checks, flights to Singapore, Dubai, or London. For this group—salaried households in metros who might spend ₹1.5–3L on an overseas family holiday once a year—the summer trip is an anticipated event, not a given. In 2026, even for them, the equation has shifted sharply.
Three converging shocks—an airspace crisis, a rupee near its record low, and surging fuel costs—have quietly redrawn the map of where this group can realistically afford to go. The rituals have not disappeared. But the destinations have.
How we got here
Three shocks, one broken route network
Apr 2025
Pakistan closes airspace to all Indian carriers following the Pahalgam attack and Operation Sindoor. Delhi–Manchester flights now take 3+ hours longer, burning 30–35% more fuel.
Jan 2026
Rupee hits ₹92/$—its worst-ever level. For a household already stretching to afford a foreign trip, a $3,000 holiday that cost ₹2.4L last year now costs closer to ₹2.8L before a single fare hike.
Feb 28, 2026
West Asia airspace disrupted following US-Israel strikes on Iran. Indian airlines lose their primary westbound corridor. Air India cuts Middle East capacity by 70%; IndiGo flies only 60% of its approved summer schedule.
Mar–Apr 2026
Fares detach from seasonal norms. Bengaluru–Frankfurt climbs to ₹1.5–1.9L. Hyderabad–Dubai triples. Jet fuel in Delhi is ~50% above late-2025 levels. For families who saved up for a Europe trip, the numbers simply no longer work.
"The problem we are going to see in 2026 is the falling rupee. The USD is at ₹90, EUR at ₹110, GBP at ₹120. While high-net-worth individuals will keep travelling, others will become more cost-conscious and trips will get shorter."
— Travel industry analyst, India Outbound, January 2026The fare shock in numbers
What the same routes cost now
For a family of three, the fare increase alone on a Europe trip adds ₹1.5–2.5L to the total bill. That is not a rounding error—it is the difference between a trip that happens and one that does not, for households who were already at the edge of what they could comfortably spend.
Return airfare per person from India — before vs after disruptions
Source: Cleartrip fare comparison, Feb 28 vs Mar 19, 2026
Where this group is shifting
The new geography of the Indian overseas holiday
Among households who do still plan to travel internationally this summer, the pivot is clear. Southeast Asia—Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, Sri Lanka—has become the default. These routes fly east and south, bypassing the disrupted corridors entirely, and their relative affordability means a family can still make the trip work without stretching beyond what they have saved.
It is worth being clear about what "affordable" means here. A Thailand trip for a family of three at ₹1.2–1.8L all-in assumes two working adults, no EMI pressure, and some savings. For most Indian households, that remains out of reach. What has changed is that the destinations once considered premium—Europe, the US, the Gulf—have now moved further out of reach even for those who could previously manage them.
Where the maths no longer works
Destinations now out of range for most
Europe, the Gulf, and North America have not become impossible—but they have moved into a bracket that only the top end of the outbound-travel segment can absorb. For households who saved ₹1.5–2L for a family holiday, these are simply not options this summer.
The domestic turn
Where most of this savings is actually going
For many households in this segment who have decided international travel simply does not pencil out this year, the money is not disappearing—it is redirecting. Thrillophilia's data shows average domestic tour value per booking up 22% versus March 2025. The same ₹1.5–2L budget that once covered a Southeast Asia trip is now funding a Kashmir stay, a Ladakh road trip, or a Kerala wellness break.
This matters beyond the summer. Analysts describe a potential structural conversion: families who have a genuinely good domestic experience in 2026 may not return to the same international patterns even when fares normalise. The geopolitical disruption may have permanently expanded the appetite for domestic travel among a class of Indian consumers who previously looked overseas by default.
Domestic destination search spikes — post-disruption, March 2026
Percentage increase in search sessions vs same period 2025. Source: Thrillophilia
Planning notes
For those who are still going abroad
For the narrower group of households who have the budget and the intention to travel internationally this summer, a few practical realities apply.
This analysis covers trends among outbound-capable Indian households — a segment representing a small fraction of the overall population. Data drawn from Thrillophilia (March 2026), Cleartrip fare comparisons, The Core, Trading Economics, and Skyscanner.
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