News Singapore Airlines

Singapore Airlines delays Dubai restart again, set to drop A380 for the winter

Singapore Airlines has pushed Dubai back two months to August 2026, but the bigger story is the winter schedule - where a removal of First Class and Premium Economy all but confirms the A380 is being dropped.

Question is, which route will get it instead?

Singapore Airlines has pushed back the restart of its suspended Dubai service by a further two months to August 2026, but the more interesting development is what’s happening from late October onwards. Booking availability all but confirms that the airline is also abandoning its Airbus A380 plans for the UAE in the northern winter 2026/27 season.

ADVERTISEMENT

The latest two-month slip on flights SQ494 and SQ495 follows a familiar pattern. When we last covered this route in early April, restart was pencilled in for 1st June, having already moved from the original 29th March launch date (with a brief 30th April plan in between). That 1st June date has now also been abandoned.

A four-class Boeing 777-300ER remains scheduled on the route from 3rd August 2026 through to the end of the northern summer 2026 season on 24th October 2026.

The bigger story is in the NW26/27 schedule, from 25th October 2026 through to 27th March 2027.

SIA still has the Airbus A380 loaded on Dubai flights across the entire winter season, but crucially it has now stopped selling First Class and Premium Economy entirely on every single one of those flights, an obvious signal that the airline does not intend to operate the superjumbo on the route at all during this period, despite what the schedule still says.

Singapore Airlines looks set to use a two-class aircraft to serve Dubai this coming winter.
(Photo: Shutterstock)

It’s exactly the same pattern we saw SIA use in the run-up to the summer 2026 A380 removal.

First Class sales were capped at four seats per flight from late February onwards, a signal we flagged at the time, before the airline formally reverted to the 777-300ER a few weeks later. The winter signal is even stronger, with both First Class and Premium Economy pulled entirely across the full five-month season.

First Class (F, A) and Premium Economy (S, T, P) have been axed from all of SIA’s Dubai flights for the NW26/27 season, despite the A380 still being reflected (for now)

The most plausible alternative is a return to two-class regional Airbus A350 Medium Haul operation, so even the Boeing 777-300ER or the Airbus A350 Long Haul don’t get a look-in here (they have Premium Economy fitted).

The A350 MH is the aircraft which served Dubai from the post-COVID restart in January 2021 right through until March 2025, when the 777-300ER returned with First Class restored to the route.

The 2018 Regional Business Class seat on SIA’s Airbus A350 Medium Haul.
(Photo: MainlyMiles)

A two-class Boeing 787-10 is the other possibility, but the A350 MH is the more obvious fit given the route’s recent history.

Either way, it would be a notable step backwards for a service that, just three months ago, was supposed to be a year-round A380 destination, alongside the likes of London and Sydney.

ADVERTISEMENT

This news means not only a lack of First Class and Premium Economy options for the winter season, but also a smaller Business Class seat that many of our readers find a tighter squeeze on longer flights – Dubai services push 7 hours 40 minutes gate-to-gate in the winter season.

SIA’s spacious A380 Business Class seat now seems to be off the cards for the Dubai route until March 2027.
(Photo: Sorbis / Shutterstock)

Here’s what SIA currently has filed as its revised schedule for the Dubai route.

Singapore Airlines
Singapore Dubai
3 Aug 2026 – 24 Oct 2026

  Days
M T W T F S S
SQ494
777-300ER
SIN
14:40
 DXB
18:00
Duration: 07:20
SQ495
777-300ER
DXB
19:45
SIN
07:30*
Duration: 07:45

* Next day

Singapore Airlines
Singapore Dubai
25 Oct 2026 – 27 Mar 2027

  Days
M T W T F S S
SQ494
A380
likely A350 MH
SIN
14:30
 DXB
18:10
Duration: 07:40
SQ495
A380
likely A350 MH

DXB
19:50
SIN
07:15*
Duration: 07:25

* Next day

Both schedules remain subject to change, based on the geopolitical situation.

This is where things get interesting, and it’s the question we flagged in our recent A380 deployment review. With Dubai now all but ruled out as an A380 destination this winter, another superjumbo aircraft is effectively freed up for redeployment elsewhere.

SIA will have one more A380 at its disposal than expected this coming winter, if the Dubai flight loses the type – which seems to have already been decided.
(Photo: Plane’s Portrait Aviation Media / Malcolm Lu)

For reference, the following winter 2026/27 flights are currently planned for A380 operation, with Dubai now almost certain to drop off this list:

  • Auckland (SQ285/286)
    From 17th January 2027 (SQ285) / 18th January 2027 (SQ286)
  • Delhi (SQ406/403)
  • Dubai (SQ494/495) – almost certain to drop off
  • Frankfurt (SQ326/325)
    Until 16th January 2027 only
  • London Heathrow (SQ308/319 and SQ322/317)
  • Mumbai (SQ424/423)
  • Shanghai (SQ830/833)
  • Sydney (SQ231/222 and SQ221/232)

The most obvious candidate is Melbourne, which has been the unexpected beneficiary of the Dubai disruption this summer, with the A380 restored to the route at short notice from 29th March for the first time in nearly three years.

If demand on the Australian route holds up, retaining the superjumbo at Tullamarine through the winter would be a logical move, particularly with Melbourne’s peak summer travel season running from December to February.

But it’s far from the only option.

ADVERTISEMENT

Auckland sees part-season operation of the A380 in the winter, with a switcheroo from the Frankfurt route in mid-January to support this. Both flights might be able to go winter-round with the superjumbo now that it looks like the fleet inventory will be one aircraft up.

Hong Kong sees a part-season A380 stint already locked in for summer 2026, and could equally see the type used in the winter, especially over the peak CNY period. Tokyo Narita is another route that has historically attracted occasional A380 deployments during peak periods and could be one to watch.

We tend to get firmer clarity on winter aircraft allocations by around August, but SIA may want to lock something in sooner than that to ensure a good volume of advance bookings, so this is one we’ll keep a close eye on over the coming weeks.

A quick aside on Singapore Airlines’ other Middle East route, Riyadh, where the same fare class hints are starting to appear.

The carrier has now restricted bookings on its planned four times weekly service to only the most expensive Flexi fare codes (‘Z’ in Business Class and ‘Y’ in Economy Class) for the entire September and October 2026 period, with normal full fare code inventory only resuming from November 2026.

This is exactly the same tell-tale hint SIA dropped in the lead-up to the previous Riyadh postponement, when the booking code restriction extended through to the end of August 2026, before the carrier formally pushed the launch back to 1st September. A November launch now looks the more likely outcome for this one.

Summary

Singapore Airlines’ Dubai route remains very much in flux.

The 3rd August 2026 restart is just the latest in a series of postponements driven by the ongoing situation in the Middle East, and given the pattern, that date can’t be treated as concrete either.

The more meaningful development is seen for the winter schedule, where the carrier’s complete withdrawal of First Class and Premium Economy seat sales all but confirms that the Airbus A380 is being dropped from the route once again.

Even the Boeing 777-300ER or Airbus A350 Long Haul don’t seem to get a look-in, with this two-class-only arrangement pointing to a return for the Airbus A350 Medium Haul or Boeing 787-10.

That, in turn, frees up another A380 for deployment elsewhere this winter. Melbourne is perhaps the obvious incumbent choice, but Auckland and Frankfurt could see extensions to season-long operation, while Hong Kong or Tokyo could equally be in the running, particularly during peak demand windows.

We’ll have more clarity by around August, when the winter season schedule firms up, if not before.

For passengers booked on Dubai flights between now and 2nd August 2026, expect to be re-accommodated on alternative services or offered full refunds, in line with the airline’s standard advisory.

(Cover Photo: Plane’s Portrait Aviation Media / Malcolm Lu)

Don’t miss an article!

No spam! Just up-to-date news on the world of miles, points and travel.

ADVERTISEMENT

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Mainly Miles

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading