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    Home»Travel»IndiGo Refunds Rs 827 Crore, Airlines Trying To Get Back Normalcy As Chaos Enters Day 7

    IndiGo Refunds Rs 827 Crore, Airlines Trying To Get Back Normalcy As Chaos Enters Day 7

    prishita@vivafoxdigital.comBy prishita@vivafoxdigital.comDecember 8, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
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    IndiGo Refunds Rs 827 Crore, Airlines Trying To Get Back Normalcy As Chaos Enters Day 7
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    IndiGo Refunds Rs 827 Crore, Airlines Trying To Get Back Normalcy As Chaos Enters Day 7

    India

    oi-Gaurav Sharma

    Time
    Published: Monday, December 8, 2025, 18:15 [IST]

    IndiGo
    said
    its
    operations
    have
    largely
    stabilised
    after
    a
    week
    of
    disruption,
    with
    1,800
    flights
    running
    on
    Monday
    and
    on-time
    performance
    across
    the
    network
    touching
    90%.
    The
    airline
    said
    the
    schedule
    is
    now
    fully
    restored,
    while
    refunds
    worth
    hundreds
    of
    crores
    and
    large-scale
    passenger
    support
    arrangements
    are
    still
    being
    processed
    across
    India.

    Despite
    that
    recovery,
    IndiGo
    continued
    to
    cancel
    a
    significant
    number
    of
    services
    from
    major
    airports
    as
    the
    impact
    of
    crew
    rostering
    issues
    lingered.
    Civil
    Aviation
    Minister
    Ram
    Mohan
    Naidu
    said
    the
    government
    has
    launched
    a
    probe
    into
    the
    episode,
    which
    followed
    the
    rollout
    of
    new
    Flight
    Duty
    Time
    Limitations
    norms
    designed
    to
    manage
    pilot
    fatigue.

    IndiGo’s
    operations
    stabilized
    with
    1,800
    flights
    and
    90%
    on-time
    performance
    on
    Monday,
    after
    a
    week
    of
    disruption
    due
    to
    crew
    rostering
    issues,
    leading
    to
    562
    cancelled
    flights
    from
    six
    metro
    airports,
    including
    150
    from
    Bengaluru.
    The
    airline
    is
    processing
    refunds
    worth
    Rs
    827
    crore
    for
    cancellations
    up
    to
    December
    15,
    and
    the
    Civil
    Aviation
    Ministry
    has
    launched
    a
    probe
    into
    the
    matter.

    IndiGo
    IndiGo

    IndiGo
    flights
    operations
    and
    cancellations

    On
    Sunday,
    IndiGo
    had
    operated
    1,650
    flights
    with
    75%
    on-time
    performance.
    By
    Monday,
    departures
    increased
    to
    1,800,
    and
    punctuality
    rose
    to
    90%
    across
    the
    system,
    according
    to
    the
    airline.
    IndiGo
    said
    all
    remaining
    cancellations
    in
    Monday’s
    plan
    were
    decided
    a
    day
    earlier,
    so
    flyers
    received
    advance
    alerts
    about
    changes.

    Even
    as
    the
    airline
    reported
    full
    restoration
    of
    its
    network,
    disruption
    remained
    heavy
    in
    some
    hubs.
    IndiGo
    on
    Monday
    cancelled
    562
    flights
    from
    six
    metro
    airports,
    and
    150
    of
    those
    cancellations
    originated
    from
    Bengaluru
    airport
    alone.
    PTI
    reported
    that
    around
    560
    of
    IndiGo’s
    usual
    2,300
    daily
    flights
    from
    the
    six
    key
    metros
    were
    called
    off.

    IndiGo
    operates
    services
    to
    and
    from
    about
    90
    domestic
    airports
    and
    more
    than
    40
    overseas
    airports.
    The
    scale
    of
    its
    schedule
    meant
    that
    any
    roster
    disruption
    quickly
    affected
    thousands
    of
    passengers
    across
    India
    and
    abroad,
    leading
    to
    long
    queues,
    delays
    and
    pressure
    on
    airport
    infrastructure
    through
    the
    first
    week
    of
    December.

    IndiGo
    flights
    refunds
    and
    passenger
    support

    The
    airline
    said
    it
    has
    already
    processed
    refunds
    worth
    Rs
    827
    crore
    for
    affected
    passengers,
    with
    the
    balance
    still
    under
    way
    for
    cancellations
    up
    to
    15
    December.
    IndiGo
    added
    that
    all
    refunds
    are
    being
    sent
    back
    to
    the
    original
    mode
    of
    payment
    and
    may
    show
    up
    as
    one
    or
    two
    separate
    transactions.

    In
    a
    detailed
    update
    on
    X,
    IndiGo
    told
    customers:
    “We’d
    like
    to
    inform
    you
    that
    refunds
    for
    flights
    cancelled
    between
    3rd
    December
    2025
    and
    15th
    December
    2025
    are
    already
    being
    processed.
    In
    case
    your
    plans
    have
    changed
    due
    to
    the
    disruption,
    we
    are
    also
    offering
    a
    full
    waiver
    on
    change
    and
    cancellation
    requests
    for
    all
    bookings
    valid
    for
    travel
    till
    15th
    December
    2025.
    You
    can
    do
    so
    by
    visiting
    https://bit.ly/4iGWxU9
    and
    following
    the
    simple
    steps.
    Refunds
    will
    be
    credited
    to
    the
    original
    payment
    method
    and
    may
    appear
    as
    one
    or
    two
    transactions,” it
    said.

    The
    airline
    also
    issued
    an
    apology
    to
    affected
    travellers.
    “We
    are
    deeply
    sorry
    for
    the
    disruption
    to
    your
    journey.
    Please
    be
    assured
    that
    our
    teams
    both
    on
    the
    ground
    and
    behind
    the
    scenes
    are
    working
    tirelessly
    to
    support
    all
    affected
    customers
    and
    restore
    normal
    operations
    as
    quickly
    as
    possible,”
    it
    added.

    We’d
    like
    to
    inform
    you
    that
    refunds
    for
    flights
    cancelled
    between
    3rd
    December
    2025
    and
    15th
    December
    2025
    are
    already
    being
    processed.In
    case
    your
    plans
    have
    changed
    due
    to
    the
    disruption,
    we
    are
    also
    offering
    a
    full
    waiver
    on
    change
    and
    cancellation
    requests
    for
    all…—
    IndiGo
    (@IndiGo6E)
    December
    8,
    2025.

    IndiGo
    flights
    assistance
    and
    key
    numbers

    To
    manage
    stranded
    passengers
    between
    1
    and
    7
    December,
    IndiGo
    said
    it
    organised
    more
    than
    9,500
    hotel
    rooms.
    The
    airline
    also
    arranged
    close
    to
    10,000
    cabs
    and
    buses
    for
    disrupted
    customers.
    Over
    4,500
    delayed
    bags
    have
    already
    reached
    travellers,
    and
    IndiGo
    said
    remaining
    baggage
    should
    be
    delivered
    within
    the
    next
    36
    hours.

    According
    to
    the
    airline,
    staff
    members
    assisted
    more
    than
    2
    lakh
    customers
    every
    day
    during
    the
    disruption
    phase.
    Support
    was
    handled
    through
    call
    centres,
    digital
    channels
    and
    airport
    counters.
    IndiGo
    said
    the
    scale
    of
    the
    operation
    required
    round-the-clock
    coordination
    across
    teams
    to
    track
    bookings,
    refunds,
    rebookings
    and
    luggage
    movements.

    Item Figure Period
    Flights
    operated
    Monday
    1,800 7th
    day
    of
    disruption
    On-time
    performance
    Monday
    90% Network-wide
    Refunds
    processed
    Rs
    827
    crore
    Up
    to
    15
    December
    2025
    Hotel
    rooms
    arranged
    Over
    9,500
    1–7
    December
    Cabs/buses
    arranged
    Close
    to
    10,000
    1–7
    December
    Flights
    cancelled
    from
    six
    metros
    Monday
    562 Including
    150
    from
    Bengaluru

    IndiGo
    flights
    DGCA
    norms
    and
    government
    probe

    The
    Directorate
    General
    of
    Civil
    Aviation
    last
    year
    introduced
    new
    Flight
    Duty
    Time
    Limitations
    rules,
    aimed
    at
    reducing
    pilot
    fatigue
    and
    improving
    safety.
    Regulators
    expected
    airlines
    to
    realign
    crew
    rosters
    before
    the
    norms
    took
    effect.
    However,
    IndiGo
    did
    not
    successfully
    reorganise
    its
    pilot
    schedules,
    which
    led
    to
    large-scale
    cancellations
    and
    delays
    once
    the
    changes
    began
    applying.

    To
    calm
    operations
    during
    the
    crisis,
    the
    DGCA
    temporarily
    paused
    implementation
    of
    some
    of
    the
    fresh
    safety
    norms.
    This
    pause
    was
    meant
    to
    stabilise
    schedules
    while
    airlines,
    including
    IndiGo,
    corrected
    their
    crew
    planning
    systems.
    Despite
    the
    temporary
    relief,
    the
    initial
    failure
    to
    match
    rosters
    with
    the
    FDTL
    rules
    triggered
    days
    of
    disruption
    for
    passengers.

    Civil
    Aviation
    Minister
    Ram
    Mohan
    Naidu
    told
    Parliament
    that
    the
    government
    is
    examining
    IndiGo’s
    role
    in
    the
    situation.
    Naidu
    said
    the
    ministry
    had
    already
    met
    IndiGo
    on
    1
    November,
    when
    the
    airline
    sought
    clarifications
    about
    the
    new
    rules.
    “This
    was
    an
    operational
    issue
    created
    by
    IndiGo…we
    were
    continuously
    in
    touch…on
    November
    1,
    too,
    the
    ministry
    had
    a
    meeting…IndiGo
    sought
    some
    clarification
    and
    it
    was
    given…they
    failed
    to
    maintain
    their
    roster,” Naidu
    told
    the
    Rajya
    Sabha.

    IndiGo
    flights
    pilot
    allegations
    and
    ongoing
    questions

    A
    pilot
    from
    IndiGo,
    speaking
    anonymously
    to
    News18,
    alleged
    that
    some
    cancellations
    were
    deliberate.
    According
    to
    the
    pilot,
    the
    airline
    tried
    to
    build
    disruption
    data
    while
    seeking
    changes
    to
    the
    FDTL
    norms.
    News18
    said
    IndiGo
    was
    asked
    for
    comment
    on
    these
    claims,
    but
    a
    response
    had
    not
    arrived
    when
    the
    report
    was
    published.

    The
    pilot
    alleged:
    “The
    FDTL
    norms
    came
    in
    January
    2024.
    But
    on
    November
    1,
    even
    with
    special
    Directorate
    General
    of
    Civil
    Aviation
    (DGCA)
    clearance,
    IndiGo
    still
    cancelled
    flights
    to
    create
    fake
    disruption
    data
    and
    pressure
    the
    regulator,”
    said
    the
    pilot,
    who
    spoke
    on
    condition
    of
    anonymity.
    “The
    pilots
    wanted
    to
    fly,
    but
    the
    airline
    refused,”
    he
    added.

    As
    IndiGo
    works
    to
    keep
    90%
    of
    flights
    on
    time
    and
    clear
    refunds,
    the
    airline
    still
    faces
    scrutiny
    from
    regulators,
    Parliament
    and
    its
    own
    staff.
    The
    probe
    ordered
    by
    the
    Centre,
    the
    DGCA’s
    handling
    of
    safety
    norms
    and
    the
    pilot’s
    allegations
    are
    likely
    to
    decide
    how
    IndiGo’s
    rostering
    systems
    and
    compliance
    practices
    are
    judged
    in
    the
    coming
    months.

    Airlines chaos Crore Day enters IndiGo normalcy refunds
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