Air India Brings Back Delhi–Rome Non-Stop Flights in Spring 2026
Air India has confirmed it will restart its direct service between Delhi and Rome on 25 March 2026, ending a pause that has lasted almost six years. The route had been suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic and now returns as part of the airline’s wider expansion across Europe. The renewed link reconnects the capitals of India and Italy with regular, scheduled long-haul flights.
The Delhi–Rome service will operate four times a week, with flights scheduled on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays. Operations will be handled by Boeing 787-8 aircraft, offering a two-class layout that includes Business Class flat beds and a large Economy cabin. Flights will arrive at and depart from Rome’s Leonardo da Vinci International Airport in Fiumicino.
Air India says the revived Rome route strengthens its European presence while supporting its role as a long-haul carrier linking India with major global cities. Rome becomes another European destination served directly from Delhi, helping the airline rebuild its international network after recent disruptions and respond to steady growth in travel demand between South Asia and Europe.
The service also supports travel beyond Italy and India. Rome-based passengers gain more direct access to cities across the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia via Delhi, including Bangkok, Colombo, Kathmandu, Kuala Lumpur, Manila and Singapore. At the same time, travellers arriving from India can plan onward journeys across Italy with fewer transfer points.
“Connecting India to more of the world remains one of our top priorities. India and Italy share deep-rooted commonalities in culture, business and trade, which makes Rome a natural addition to Air India’s expanding network. This non-stop service not only augments direct connectivity between the two capital cities but also offers travellers from Italy greater choice and seamless onward connections via our Delhi hub to vibrant destinations across the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia."
After years of indirect routings and long layovers, the return of a non-stop Delhi–Rome flight quietly changes how the journey feels. Fewer layovers, fewer airport changes, and clearer schedules make long-haul trips easier to plan and less tiring. While many international routes are still finding their footing, this service restores a direct link that matters. It reconnects two regions with long-standing cultural and economic ties and brings a more straightforward way to travel between them.