BREAKING: Central Asia Aviation Alerts – Increased Overflight Traffic & Procedural Risks | Updated 1130 IST 7 March 2026 | Safe Fly Aviation
⚠ ONGOING SURGE – CENTRAL ASIA OVERFLIGHTS | UPDATED 1130 IST / 0600 UTC, 7 MARCH 2026 Middle East crisis forces massive rerouting via Caucasus & Central Asia. Afghanistan FIR uncontrolled (Class G, no ATS); procedural NOTAMs mandatory. Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan hubs under strain from overflow traffic. Minor GPS interference & border transit issues reported. EASA/FAA caution on reroutes. Increased fuel burn & delays expected.
AVIATION ALERT – CENTRAL ASIA (UPDATED 1130 IST, 7 MARCH 2026) Open but high traffic: Kazakhstan (UAxx), Uzbekistan (UTxx), Kyrgyzstan (UCxx), Tajikistan (UTxx). Afghanistan (OAKX) – Uncontrolled Class G, procedural overflights only (TIBA, spacing). No full closures in core FIRs; monitor for GPS risks & capacity strain. EASA/FAA advise caution on reroutes due to Middle East spillover.

Aviation Alerts and Advisories in Central Asia – Overflight Surge & Procedural Constraints Update
7 March 2026, 1130 IST

Originally published: 4 March 2026
Last updated: 7 March 2026, 1130 IST (0600 UTC)
Region: Central Asia — Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan (overflight corridor)
Status: 🟡 HIGH TRAFFIC – Reroute Surge from Middle East Crisis, Procedural Risks
1130 IST Update — 7 March 2026

Central Asia has become a key bypass corridor due to widespread Middle East airspace closures. Europe-Asia traffic reroutes north via Caucasus and across Afghanistan/Central Asia FIRs, causing significant overflight increases. Afghanistan remains uncontrolled Class G with no ATS; strict procedural NOTAMs (15-min spacing, TIBA broadcasts) apply. Core FIRs (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, etc.) open but experiencing capacity strain, minor GPS issues, and border transit pressures from evacuations. Safe Fly Aviation monitors continuously. This reflects verified info from authorities, NOTAMs, Flightradar24, OPSGROUP, EASA/FAA as of 1130 IST / 0600 UTC 7 March 2026. Situation dynamic; base decisions on current NOTAMs.

📋 Current NOTAM & Restriction Summary (as of early March 2026 — per Flightradar24/OPSGROUP)

High traffic & procedural requirements; extensions likely for Afghanistan procedures. Monitor real-time.

FIR / CountryICAOStatusNotes / Expiry
AfghanistanOAKXUncontrolled (Class G)Procedural overflights only; TIBA & spacing mandatory; ongoing
KazakhstanUAxxOpenHigh traffic; capacity strain
UzbekistanUTxxOpenIncreased overflights; monitor
KyrgyzstanUCxxOpenAlternative routing; caution
TajikistanUTxxOpenLow traffic; open
TurkmenistanUTAAOpenBorder transit for evacuations

🚨 Critical Airspace Status – 1130 IST / 0600 UTC, 7 March 2026

FIR / AirspaceICAOStatusNotes (as of 1130 IST, 7 March)
Kabul FIR (Afghanistan)OAKXUNCONTROLLED CLASS GNo ATS; procedural NOTAMs: 15-min spacing, TIBA broadcasts mandatory. High overflight due to reroutes.
Almaty/Astana FIR (Kazakhstan)UAAA / UACCOPENSignificant traffic increase; capacity & delay risks.
Tashkent FIR (Uzbekistan)UTTAOPENHigh reroute volume; monitor for strain.
Bishkek FIR (Kyrgyzstan)UCFMOPENAlternative paths; minor GPS reports.
Dushanbe FIR (Tajikistan)UTDDOPENLow impact; open routing.
Ashgabat FIR (Turkmenistan)UTAAOPENBorder crossings active for evacuations; overland transit strain.
Baku FIR (Azerbaijan – Caucasus link)UBBBOPENKey entry to Central Asia corridor; high traffic.
Kabul FIR (Afghanistan)OAKX
Status: UNCONTROLLED
Class G; procedural only. High reroute traffic.
Kazakhstan FIRsUAAA/UACC
Status: OPEN
High traffic; capacity strain.
Uzbekistan FIRUTTA
Status: OPEN
Increased overflights; monitor.
Kyrgyzstan FIRUCFM
Status: OPEN
Alternative routing; caution.
Tajikistan FIRUTDD
Status: OPEN
Low impact; open.
Turkmenistan FIRUTAA
Status: OPEN
Border transit active.

Key Updated Facts at a Glance – 1130 IST, 7 March 2026

  • Middle East spillover: Closures force reroutes via Central Asia; traffic surge in Afghanistan & Kazakhstan FIRs.
  • Afghanistan FIR: Uncontrolled Class G; no ATC. Mandatory procedural NOTAMs (spacing, TIBA broadcasts).
  • Core FIRs open: Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan fully available but under capacity pressure.
  • Evacuation transit: Increased land crossings (e.g., Turkmenistan-Iran border) affecting regional logistics.
  • GPS interference: Sporadic reports in region; treat GNSS with caution.
  • Airline impact: Longer routes add 1–4+ hours; fuel burn up; some carriers limit Central Asia services.
  • Regulatory: EASA/FAA caution on reroutes; monitor NOTAMs closely.
  • Stranded/overflow: Hubs like Almaty/Tashkent seeing delays from increased transit.

Crisis Context Timeline: Late February – 7 March 2026

  • Late February: Middle East escalates; initial reroutes begin via Caucasus/Central Asia.
  • 1–2 March: Gulf FIR closures; traffic surges into Afghanistan FIR. Procedural NOTAMs re-issued.
  • 3–4 March: Evacuations via Turkmenistan/Iran borders increase. Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan report strain.
  • 5–7 March: Overflight volumes remain high; no de-escalation in Middle East. Minor GPS & capacity issues noted.

Commercial Airline and Network Disruption

Traditional Gulf corridors blocked; long-haul Europe/India-Asia flights detour north, adding time/fuel. Central Asian hubs repositioning for overflow; aircraft/crew strain.

Airline Status as of 1130 IST, 7 March 2026

  • Air Astana (KC): Increased domestic/regional; international reroutes ongoing.
  • Uzbekistan Airways (HY): Tashkent hub strained; some schedule adjustments.
  • Air India / IndiGo: Central Asia routes affected earlier; now using alternatives.
  • Turkish Airlines / Others: Rolling use of Caucasus corridor; monitor capacity.

Routing Alternatives

Primary: Caucasus (Azerbaijan/Georgia) → Afghanistan → Central Asia → China/Mongolia. Add 1–4+ hours. Southern options via Egypt/Saudi strained.


Travel Advisories and Passenger Guidance

  • Expect delays: High traffic in Almaty, Tashkent; check airline for reroutes.
  • Afghanistan overflights: Safe if procedural; no landing ops advised.
  • Insurance/Refunds: Flexible policies for affected routes; check war-risk coverage.
  • Monitor: Use Flightradar24 & official NOTAMs for real-time status.

Risk Considerations for Aviation

Primary risks: High traffic density, uncontrolled Afghanistan airspace, sporadic GPS jamming from regional tensions. No active conflict in core Central Asia.


Regulatory Environment: FAA, EASA and ICAO

EASA/FAA: Caution advisories for reroutes through Afghanistan/Central Asia due to procedural & spillover risks. Monitor NOTAMs/Flightradar24.


Impact on Private Jet and Business Aviation Operations

Avoid uncontrolled FIRs without experience. Use procedural routes only; verify real-time NOTAMs.

Operational Advisory for Non-Scheduled Aviation – 1130 IST, 7 March 2026

  • Strict adherence to Afghanistan procedural NOTAMs.
  • Expect capacity delays in Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan.
  • Treat GNSS cautiously; conventional nav backup.
  • Carry extra fuel; refresh plans frequently.

Operational Recommendations for Airlines and Operators

  1. Void plans >30 min old due to traffic changes.
  2. Monitor NOTAMs/OPSGROUP every 30 min.
  3. Use TIBA & spacing in Afghanistan FIR.
  4. Plan for extra fuel & crew duty extensions.
  5. Verify hub capacity at Almaty/Tashkent.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Afghanistan airspace safe for overflights in March 2026?

Uncontrolled Class G; no ATS. Procedural NOTAMs mandatory (spacing, broadcasts). Used heavily for reroutes; follow exactly.

Are Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan airports affected?

Open; but high traffic from reroutes may cause delays. Check airline & airport updates.

When will reroutes ease?

Tied to Middle East de-escalation; no timeline. Expect prolonged high traffic.