Regional airlines Latest News
- The Ministry of Civil Aviation has issued no-objection certificates (NOCs) to two new regional airlines—Al Hind Air and FlyExpress—bringing the total number of proposed regional carriers to four.
- Two others, Air Kerala and Shankh Air, received NOCs last year but are yet to secure Air Operator Certificates (AOCs) and begin flights.
- While the government is keen to expand domestic aviation in one of the world’s fastest-growing markets, the regional airline segment remains high-risk, with a history of more failures than successes.
What an NOC Allows—and How It’s Granted
- Issued by the Ministry of Civil Aviation, an NOC lets applicants set up offices, hire staff, and pursue further approvals.
- It’s granted after assessing financial soundness, operational plans, and security clearances, and is typically valid for three years.
Duopoly Worries After IndiGo Disruption
- The announcement of new regional airlines comes weeks after a major operational disruption at IndiGo, which renewed concerns about India’s airline duopoly.
- Together, IndiGo and the Air India group command over 90% of the domestic market, heightening risks from over-concentration.
- In this context, the NoC is being read as a signal to encourage competition, though experts urge caution.
New Entrants Unlikely to Shift Market Shares
- While fresh regional players are a positive signal, experts doubt they will significantly dent the dominance of the two majors.
- The tougher question is whether these startups can survive India’s unforgiving aviation economics.
The New Regional Players
- Al Hind Air: Backed by the Kerala-based Al Hind Group; plans a regional commuter model using ATR-72 turboprops.
- FlyExpress: Plans yet to be detailed publicly.
- Air Kerala: Envisions an ultra-low-cost carrier (ULCC) connecting tier-2 and tier-3 cities to major hubs with turboprops; despite an NOC last year, it has struggled to induct aircraft—required for an AOC from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation.
- Shankh Air: Promoted by UP-based entrepreneur; aims to operate regional routes within and beyond Uttar Pradesh from the upcoming Noida International Airport, with operations planned in the coming months.
Why Regional Airlines Struggle in India
- Despite a few successes—Star Air, Fly91, and government-owned Alliance Air—India’s regional aviation space has seen many collapses.
- Past failures include Paramount Airways, Air Pegasus, TruJet, Zoom Air, Air Carnival, Air Costa, Air Mantra, and Air Odisha.
- More recently, Fly Big suspended operations in October.
Structural Challenges in the Market
- India is a tough aviation market, especially for small carriers.
- High price sensitivity, thin profit margins, high debt, and dollar-denominated costs (fuel, leasing, maintenance) favour large airlines with scale, efficient fleets, and deep pockets.
- Most regional airlines lack the financial resilience to withstand shocks.
Demand Constraints at Smaller Airports
- Regional routes often suffer from limited and seasonal demand, while most passenger traffic remains concentrated at major hubs.
- This makes load factors volatile and route planning risky for small carriers.
Financing and Revenue Limitations
- Without backing from a major airline group, regional carriers struggle to access finance and debt, as lenders perceive higher risk.
- Short-haul routes also face stiff competition from trains and road transport, and offer fewer opportunities for ancillary revenues like belly cargo.
What Could Improve Viability
- There is cautious optimism that a growing, upwardly mobile middle class could improve regional airline prospects.
- Success will hinge on lean operations, serving genuinely underserved regions, building dominance in specific geographies, and—crucially—strong financial backing to sustain operations through inevitable downturns.
Last updated on December, 2025
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Regional airlines FAQs
Q1. Why are regional airlines in India in the news?+
Q2. Does an NOC allow an airline to start flying?+
Q3. Why is India’s aviation market tough for regional airlines?+
Q4. Why can’t new regional airlines break the duopoly?+
Q5. What could improve the viability of regional airlines?+
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