The sudden grounding of Airbus A320 family aircraft at many busy airports in India has created a stir in the aviation sector. DGCA has given clear instructions to all airlines that these aircraft will not be able to fly until the mandatory technical upgrades are completed. For this reason, the pressure of crowd and delay is clearly visible at many airports.
The biggest impact was seen at Delhi Airport, where more than 60 A320 aircraft have been parked together. In Mumbai also, about 26 aircraft have been temporarily taken out of operation. The same process is going on in other major cities of the country – Bengaluru, Kolkata and Chennai, where other aircraft of the A320 series are being sent one after the other for technical upgrade.

Why did this upgrade suddenly become necessary?
The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and Airbus recently issued a mandatory directive, according to which all operators of the A320 series must immediately update the software in their fleet. This update is related to flight safety and reduces the possibility of technical glitches. Due to the old aircraft, there is a need to change some hardware, due to which the process is becoming longer.
Direct impact on flight operations
The instructions related to airlines were issued around midnight, so many airlines could not be ready by morning. There were flight delays on some routes and this pressure started increasing as the day progressed. Companies like IndiGo, Air India and Vistara, which have a large number of Airbus A320s in their fleet, appear to be the most affected.
Air India gave information about its situation
Clarifying the situation, Air India said that their engineers are working continuously so that the upgrade can be completed before the scheduled time. According to the airline, a large part of their fleet has already been updated and all the aircraft will be ready on time. Air India also said that no large-scale changes have been made to the schedule and at present no flight has been directly cancelled.
At Air India, safety is top priority. Following EASA and Airbus directives for a mandatory software and hardware realignment on A320 family aircraft worldwide, our engineers have been working round-the-clock to complete the task at the earliest. We have already completed…
— Air India (@airindia) November 29, 2025
DGCA instructions are very strict
DGCA has ordered airlines that no A320 aircraft will fly without completing the update. There cannot be any relaxation in this rule, because this is a matter directly related to the safety of passengers. The agency has asked the airlines to finish the entire process as soon as possible, so that normal operations can be resumed.
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