India to lift restrictions on ticket fare prices from Aug. 31

NEW DELHI, Aug 10 (Reuters) – India will remove the fare caps it imposed on domestic airlines in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic from Aug. 31, the country’s civil aviation ministry said on Wednesday, lifting restrictions on ticket prices.

The government, in a rare move, had regulated fares by imposing a minimum and maximum band based on the flight’s duration to prevent ticket prices from spiking due to pent-up demand arising from restrictions on air travel easing.

The decision will bring relief to airlines including IndiGo (INGL.NS), SpiceJet Ltd (SPJT.NS), Air India, and Vistara – a joint venture between the Tata Group and Singapore Airlines (SIAL.SI) – as well as new entrant. Akasa Air, allowing them to pay price tickets freely.

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India is seeing a strong rebound in domestic air travel, with passenger numbers touching pre-COVID levels, boosting airlines’ revenues. However, high fuel prices are eating away at their profitability.

The fare caps were imposed by the government when it lifted restrictions on air travel in May 2020, after two months of grounding all planes to curb the virus’ spread.

At the time it said that for a two-hour flight between the cities of Mumbai and Delhi, airlines would be allowed to charge a minimum fare of 3,500 rupees ($ 44) and a maximum of 10,000 rupees ($ 126), while ensuring that 40% of the tickets sold were priced below the median value.

($ 1 = 79.4900 Indian rupees)

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Reporting by Aditi Shah; Editing by Louise Heavens and Jan Harvey

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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