After British Airways and Virgin Atlantic suspend flights to Tel Aviv, can you fly out of Israel?

Exclusive: Seats are available through the weekend from Ben Gurion airport to the UK via hubs in Europe and the Middle East

After British Airways and Virgin Atlantic suspend flights to Tel Aviv, can you fly out of Israel?

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All UK airlines have now suspended flights to and from Israel. Wizz Air and easyJet “paused” operations serving Tel Aviv shortly after the Hamas assault on Israel began. British Airways and Virgin Atlantic continued to fly from London Heathrow to Ben Gurion international airport up to 11 October. Both airlines have now suspended the route.

Virgin Atlantic operated a round-trip on 11 October. But on the same day a British Airways jet diverted safely back to Heathrow shortly before the planned touchdown in Tel Aviv – a 5,000-mile “flight to nowhere”.

A BA spokesperson said: “Safety is always our highest priority and following the latest assessment of the situation we’re suspending our flights to and from Tel Aviv.

“We’re contacting customers booked to travel to or from Tel Aviv to apologise for the inconvenience and offer options including a full refund and rebooking with another airline or with British Airways at a later date. We continue to monitor the situation in the region closely.”

On social media, a notion that all flights from Tel Aviv are fully booked is taking hold.

Adam Hayes wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter: “My family and I (including two young kids) are still stuck in Israel ... with no way out. All US and most European flights are cancelled. Those that remain have been sold out for days, and for days into the future. We are at a loss.”

But The Independent has found flights that are available – at a price – on every day up to and including Sunday 14 October.

The national carrier, El Al, continues to fly largely normally. On Thursday morning alone it departed from Tel Aviv to London, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Madrid, Munich, Venice, Paris, New York, Miami and Boston.

At the same time, there were departures to:

Addis Ababa on Ethiopian AirlinesAthens on Cyprus AirwaysBucharest on TaromIstanbul on PegasusLarnaca on Arkia

For immediate departure, Cyprus Airways was selling seats to Larnaca for £320. Many options for onward travel to the UK are available from Cyprus.

On Friday on Etihad, travellers can fly from Tel Aviv via Abu Dhabi to London for $978 (£793).

On Saturday, the Cypriot airline Tus Air has two flights from Tel Aviv to Larnaca. The first is sold out, but the second has seats for €340 (£293).

On Sunday, the best option appears to be on Tarom via Bucharest to London Heathrow for £411.

The first day for which El Al has seats available on its flight to London Luton is Tuesday, when the fare is £297.

One aviation insider told The Independent that commercial aviation in Israel is “getting very warm”.

Earlier an aviation membership organisation, OpsGroup, warned: “Israel is now an active war zone. As such, all lessons learned regarding civil operations in conflict zones over the last nine years since MH17 need to be applied.”

Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, a passenger flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, was shot down over occupied eastern Ukraine in 2014 by a Buk anti-aircraft missile that belonged to the Russian army. All 298 passengers and crew died in the attack on the Boeing 777.

Ops Group said: “The ultimate sentiment from MH17 still echoes: ‘What were they doing flying over a war zone?’ We truly hope the same question doesn’t need to be asked in Tel Aviv airspace this week.”

On Thursday, it added: “Despite assurances from the authorities that the airspace is ‘safe,’ It sure as hell isn’t.”