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India March 25, 2026, 10:17 p.m.

The End of "Ghost Airports": Cabinet Approves ₹28,840 Crore Overhaul for 'Modified UDAN'

To prevent regional flight routes from collapsing once initial subsidies dry up, the government has cleared a massive ten-year funding extension and shifted the financial burden directly to the exchequer.

by Author Brajesh Mishra
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What happened: The Union Cabinet approved the "Modified UDAN" scheme with a massive ₹28,840 crore outlay for the next 10 years.

Why it happened: The original scheme saw nearly 50% of its routes discontinued once subsidies expired; the new version triples the funding and extends airline support to 5 years to ensure long-term viability.

The strategic play: The plan focuses on building 100 new airports, 200 helipads, and purchasing "Made-in-India" planes (HAL Dornier/Dhruv) to connect remote and hilly regions.

India's stake: By shifting the subsidy burden from passenger levies to the government budget, the move aims to connect 120 new destinations and cater to 4 crore regional passengers by 2036.

The deciding question: Can the 5-year subsidy window finally make regional flying profitable for airlines, or will we see another wave of discontinued routes in 2031?


The Union Cabinet has just approved a massive, nearly six-fold increase in funding for India’s flagship regional aviation program. On Wednesday, the government, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, cleared the launch of the Regional Connectivity Scheme – "Modified UDAN."

Designed to operate over a ten-year period from FY 2026-27 to FY 2035-36, the scheme features a total budgetary outlay of ₹28,840 crore. This structural overhaul is specifically designed to fix the "ghost airport" problem that plagued the original rollout, ensuring that newly established regional routes don't immediately collapse once their initial government subsidies dry up.

How We Got Here

  • The Original Promise: Launched in October 2016, the original UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik) scheme was designed to make air travel affordable for the common citizen by subsidizing regional routes and capping fares.
  • The Sustainability Gap: While the scheme successfully operationalized 663 routes, recent data highlighted a major flaw: nearly 327 of those routes had been quietly discontinued after their initial three-year subsidy window ended, leaving several newly built regional airports sitting empty.
  • The 2026 Fix: Wednesday's Cabinet approval revamps the entire scheme. It moves the focus away from merely "launching" new routes and toward financially sustaining the entire regional aviation ecosystem for the next decade.

The Five Pillars of Modified UDAN Funding

The massive ₹28,840 crore outlay is strategically broken down into five critical financial components to ensure both infrastructure development and airline viability:

  • Aerodrome CAPEX (₹12,159 Crore): Designed to develop 100 new airports from currently unserved or underserved airstrips over the next 8 years.
  • Viability Gap Funding / VGF (₹10,043 Crore): Provides direct subsidies to airlines. Crucially, this support is extended from the previous 3-year limit to a 5-year window per route.
  • Modern Helipads (₹3,661 Crore): Allocated to construct 200 modern helipads (at roughly ₹15 crore each) specifically tailored for hilly, remote, and inaccessible regions.
  • Operations & Maintenance Support (₹2,577 Crore): Offers daily sustenance and operational funding for 441 aerodromes, capped at ₹3.06 crore per year per airport.
  • Aircraft Acquisition (₹400 Crore): Funds earmarked to procure 2 HAL Dhruv helicopters and 2 HAL Dornier planes specifically for regional use.

The BIGSTORY Reframe — The "Exchequer Shift" and the 5-Year Lifeline

Mainstream media is currently focusing heavily on the headline-grabbing plan to build 100 new airports. However, the true "Missed Angle" is how these flights are being funded.

Previously, UDAN subsidies were primarily funded by a "levy" (a small tax) applied to air tickets on major, profitable trunk routes. The Modified UDAN shifts this massive financial burden directly to the government exchequer.

More importantly, the Viability Gap Funding (VGF) subsidy period for airlines has been officially extended from 3 years to 5 years. This is a direct, structural admission by the government that three years was simply not enough time for a regional route in India to become self-sustaining. This 5-year lifeline aims to prevent the creation of more "ghost airports" that go silent the moment the government check stops coming.

What This Means for India

  • Boosting Domestic Aerospace: By specifically earmarking ₹400 crore to procure HAL-manufactured helicopters and planes, the government is deliberately linking regional connectivity to domestic aerospace manufacturing. This ensures that the fleet required for remote terrains is "Made in India," reducing dependence on foreign lessors for small aircraft.
  • "Challenge Mode" Implementation: The Ministry of Civil Aviation must now implement a competitive "Challenge Mode" for the 100 new airports. States that can provide land, security, and utility concessions faster will be prioritized, ensuring the ₹12,159 crore CAPEX isn't lost to endless land acquisition hurdles.
  • Macro Stability: This massive infrastructure push comes on the heels of the government assuring energy security in an all-party meeting and mandating the switch to piped gas. Together, these moves signal an administration determined to push its domestic "Viksit Bharat" economic agenda forward, even as the West Asia crisis threatens global markets.

If a flight path needs five years of government money to survive, is it a public utility or a commercial failure?

Sources

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Brajesh Mishra
Brajesh Mishra Associate Editor

Brajesh Mishra is an Associate Editor at BIGSTORY NETWORK, specializing in daily news from India with a keen focus on AI, technology, and the automobile sector. He brings sharp editorial judgment and a passion for delivering accurate, engaging, and timely stories to a diverse audience.

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