
Ben Gurion Airport
Israel's principal international airport, closed and targeted during the Iran-Israel conflict.
Last refreshed: 30 March 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can Ben Gurion Airport reopen while Iran's missiles retain range to reach Tel Aviv?
Timeline for Ben Gurion Airport
Targeted in 61st IRGC wave after Larijani's death
Iran Conflict 2026: Two dead in Ramat Gan; 61st IRGC waveMentioned in: All six KC-135 crew confirmed dead
Iran Conflict 2026Remained closed as KC-135 Stratotanker crashed in Iraq
Iran Conflict 2026: US KC-135 tanker crashes in IraqTargeted in Mojtaba's first one-tonne warhead missile wave
Iran Conflict 2026: Mojtaba's first strike at Ben GurionMentioned in: IRGC adopts one-tonne minimum warhead
Iran Conflict 2026- What is Ben Gurion Airport?
- Ben Gurion Airport (IATA: TLV) is Israel's main international airport, located at Lod in the Tel Aviv District, about 15 km south-east of the city. It handles the majority of Israel's international passenger and cargo flights.
- Is Ben Gurion Airport open during the Iran-Israel conflict?
- Ben Gurion Airport was closed early in the conflict and was not expected to reopen before the following week. The IRGC claimed strikes targeting the Tel Aviv area, including the airport.Source: Lowdown
- How many flights were cancelled because of the Iran-Israel war?
- Aviation analytics firm Cirium reported that 13,000 of 32,000 scheduled Middle East flights were cancelled, representing about 40% of all regional air traffic, a nearly tenfold increase within 24 hours.Source: Cirium
- Did Iran strike Ben Gurion Airport?
- Iran's IRGC claimed strikes on over 100 military and security targets in the Tel Aviv area, including Ben Gurion Airport, as part of Operation True Promise 4, using one-tonne warhead missiles. These claims are unverified.Source: IRGC
- How does Ben Gurion closure compare to other airport closures in regional conflicts?
- The closure was part of a region-wide shutdown affecting 40% of Middle East flights, comparable in scale to the early days of the 2003 Gulf War disruptions but faster in onset due to missile threats rather than airspace restrictions.Source: Cirium
Background
Ben Gurion Airport is Israel's primary international gateway, located at Lod in the Tel Aviv District, roughly 15 kilometres south-east of Tel Aviv city centre. It handles the vast majority of Israel's international passenger and cargo traffic, making it a strategic symbol and critical infrastructure node.
Ben Gurion Airport closed within days of hostilities beginning, not expected to reopen before the following week, as aviation analytics firm Cirium reported 40% of all regional air traffic cancelled across the Middle East — 13,000 of 32,000 scheduled flights. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) subsequently claimed strikes on over 100 targets in the Tel Aviv area when it launched one-tonne-warhead missiles, marking a doctrinal shift to heavier concentrated strikes.
The airport's closure showed how quickly missile conflict severs civilian infrastructure: a week of hostilities wiped out nearly half of all scheduled regional air traffic. A US Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker from a mission that landed at Ben Gurion Airport was linked to a crash in Iraq, underlining the airport's dual role as civilian hub and active-conflict logistics node.