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The Iran–US Deal Just Shifted Travel Again … So What Happens to Your Backup Flights?

After months of instability across Middle Eastern airspace, the latest Iran–US deal has triggered a rapid recalibration of aviation routes, pricing, and airline strategy. Flights are being reinstated, corridors are reopening, and airlines are quietly adjusting capacity as the region edges back toward stability.

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And while governments and carriers work through the geopolitical implications, travellers open their inboxes and ask a much more relatable question: “What do I do with the backup flight I no longer need?”

Because during the disruption, many people didn’t just book a trip – they built a parallel one. A second flight “just in case”. A quiet insurance policy against cancellations, reroutes, or that familiar feeling of watching an itinerary unravel at the worst possible moment.

Now, with stability returning following the Iran–US agreement, those carefully held backup bookings are starting to feel less like protection and more like clutter you never meant to keep.

According to Mark Trim, Managing Director of Complex Travel Group, this is exactly where many travellers are misreading the situation – especially when it comes to flexibility.

“During the disruption, availability in lower booking classes tightened significantly,” Trim explains. “That pushed a lot of travellers into higher-tier inventory, which in many cases sits in fare categories that are naturally more flexible – often refundable with minimal penalty, depending on the airline and booking class.”

In other words, the fares people grabbed quickly, often at inflated prices and under pressure, are sometimes the very ones that quietly offer the most breathing room now.

Particularly on carriers such as Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific, airlines assign these backup tickets to fare buckets built for flexibility rather than restriction, while travellers often hold them without realising how much room to move still exists in the booking class. And while airline pricing structures can look complex from the outside, the reality is surprisingly simple: airlines usually embed flexibility in the booking class, not just in the price you pay.

“There’s also a misconception that cancellation has a ticking clock attached to it,” Trim adds. “But airline tickets don’t behave like hotels or cruises. There’s generally no sliding penalty scale as departure approaches. If the fare is refundable, it usually remains so – right up until close to travel.”

That detail matters now, because the emotional urgency that drove many of those backup bookings is starting to fade. The world hasn’t just changed – it’s settled again, at least for now.

And when that happens, travellers often find themselves holding onto things out of habit rather than necessity.

Two flights. Two plans. One trip that only needs one of them.

Trim suggests the decision point is simpler than it feels: once your original flight is confirmed and operating normally, you can cancel the backup booking because it no longer serves any purpose and simply duplicates your confirmed travel plans.

“People tend to wait for absolute certainty, but in reality, once your main itinerary is secure, the backup becomes redundant,” he says. “At that point, you’re better off cancelling and recovering the funds where possible, rather than holding both bookings indefinitely.”

Of course, not every fare works the same way, and this is where travellers need to do a quick check. Airlines set refundability based on the carrier, booking class, and timing of ticket issuance, so travellers need to first understand exactly what they’re holding before they make any move.

Then comes the broader question: what happens if lots of travellers make the same decision at once?

Realistically, not much at the surface level.

Airlines don’t tend to respond to a wave of last-minute cancellations by dropping fares dramatically. After months of disruption-driven pricing, they’re more likely to let inventory settle quietly through upgrades, frequent flyer redemptions, and internal reallocation than release a flood of cheap seats.

At best, what travellers may notice is a gentle easing – some of the inflated post-disruption pricing on Asian carriers drifting back toward parity with Middle Eastern airlines. But a dramatic drop in fares is unlikely.

Still, there’s a longer thread running underneath all of this that the industry will be watching closely.

Because if this pattern repeats – disruption, hedging, then mass cancellations – airlines will eventually respond in a more structural way.

“The simplest adjustment would be introducing clearer cancellation rules tied to departure windows, similar to hotels or cruise lines,” Trim notes. “That could mean stricter refund conditions within 7 to 14 days of departure, regardless of booking class.”

It’s not a radical shift, but it would close the gap that currently allows flexibility to exist so freely during periods of volatility. For now though, the takeaway feels more personal than systemic.

As the aviation landscape steadies following the Iran–US deal, travellers are being reminded of something almost deceptively simple: optionality is useful, but only for as long as you actually need it.

Marie-Antoinette Issa: Marie-Antoinette Issa is the Beauty & Lifestyle Editor for The Carousel, Women Love Tech and Women Love Travel. She has worked across news and women's lifestyle magazines and websites including Cosmopolitan, Cleo, Madison, Concrete Playground, The Urban List and Daily Mail, I Quit Sugar and Huffington Post.
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