Amid fragile de-escalation in the US-Iran conflict—sparked by US and Israeli strikes on military targets starting February 28, 2026—Iranian airspace remains partially open to limited commercial traffic at key airports like Tehran (IKA) and Mashhad (MHD) following April ceasefires and reopenings, with no broad NOTAM-ordered closure affecting multiple hubs in the past 30 days. Escalations since May 10, including Iran's rejection of a US ceasefire proposal via Pakistani mediators, Strait of Hormuz restrictions around May 12, and intercepted Iranian drone/missile threats triggering UAE airspace limits on May 11, signal persistent risks of renewed shutdowns. Traders eye diplomatic talks, proxy attacks, or strike fears for potential triggers of a qualifying major suspension.
Eksperymentalne podsumowanie AI odwołujące się do danych Polymarket. To nie jest porada handlowa i nie ma wpływu na rozstrzyganie tego rynku. · ZaktualizowanoIran bans small private aircraft flights amid regional tensions
May 15 jumps to 14%5%
Iran issued a notice banning small private aircraft from flying in the country, with exceptions for the oil industry and emergency medical flights. This indicated heightened security concerns but did not constitute a major airspace closure affecting commercial flights.
Iran resumes commercial flights at Tehran’s international airport after war hiatus
May 15 plunges to 4%28%
On May 9, 2026, Iranian state media reported the resumption of commercial flights at Imam Khomeini International Airport in Tehran for the first time since the war with the United States and Israel began. This reopening indicated that Iran's airspace was not broadly closed and commercial aviation was operational, reducing the likelihood of a major airspace closure by the May 15 deadline.

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