LONDON— A few days ago, we reported that British Airways (BA) will suspend flights between London Heathrow (LHR) and Dallas Fort Worth (DFW) from March 30, 2025. This coincides with the end of the winter 24-25 season.
However, the airline has again updated the schedule and will resume LHR-DFW flights in October 2025. This means they will not operate flights during Summer, making it a seasonal winter route.
British Airways London to Dallas Flight
According to information shared by Ishrion Aviation, British Airways is set to resume flights from London Heathrow to Dallas Fort Worth on October 26, 2025.
This marks the return of this route since its suspension on March 30. Although this date is tentative and subject to adjustments.
- The current schedule for the route features flight BA193, departing LHR at 10:40 AM and arriving in DFW at 4:00 PM local time.
- The return flight, BA192, is set to leave DFW at 7:30 PM and land in LHR at 9:40 AM the following day.
British Airways plans to operate these flights with a Boeing 777-200ER, although this may also be revised before the launch date. It could serve it with Airbus A380 or A350-1000s.
Cutting Bahrain and Kuwait Routes
British Airways will suspend flights to Bahrain (BAH) and Kuwait (KWI) by March 2025 due to ongoing issues with Rolls-Royce engines powering its Boeing 787 Dreamliner fleet. These suspensions mark the end of nearly 92 years of service to Bahrain and 63 years to Kuwait, as the airline grapples with engine supply chain delays.
Despite earlier plans for a twice-daily flight from London to Miami (MIA), British Airways will operate just one.
The airline recently ceased nonstop flights from London to Beijing (PEK) and halved its flights to Hong Kong, attributing the reductions to high operating costs caused by Russian airspace closures.
British Airways has also postponed its planned return to Kuala Lumpur (KUL) by at least six months. The airline had intended to launch daily Dreamliner flights to the Malaysian capital earlier this month but had to delay due to ongoing delays in Rolls-Royce’s Trent 1000 engine parts supply.
Initially, Chief Operations Officer Rene de Groot informed staff that these disruptions would likely last around ten days, leading to short-notice cancellations on various routes, including Doha (DOH). flagged PYOK.
However, supply chain issues with Rolls-Royce appear set to extend well beyond initial estimates, prompting the airline to re-evaluate its route structure and operations.
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