Lakshadweep to finally get seaplanes after decades of ships and single runway : Indian Aviation NewsAviation India

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Lakshadweep to finally get seaplanes after decades of ships and single runway

Getting to Lakshadweep has always required either a 10–20 hour sea voyage or a single, heavily-booked flight to Agatti Island, one of only two ways in or out of India's only coral atoll Union Territory. But starting May 13, 2026, weather permitting, 12 trial seaplane flights will take off from Kochi to test the feasibility of a full commercial seaplane service connecting multiple Lakshadweep islands, a milestone that India's aviation sector has chased for decades.

The trials are being facilitated by Cochin International Airport Ltd (CIAL) in association with the DGCA, the UT Administration of Lakshadweep, and the Airports Authority of India. The aircraft involved is a Twin Otter seaplane operated by SkyHop Aviation, India's first DGCA-certified commercial seaplane operator, which received its Air Operator Certificate (AOC) from the DGCA in April 2026.

The trials will cover two route clusters: Kochi–Agatti–Kalpeni–Kavaratti and Kochi–Kadmat–Kiltan–Agatti, covering destinations that have no regular air connectivity today.

Last week, on May 7, 2026, Union Civil Aviation Minister Kinjarapu Ram Mohan Naidu announced at the GIFT City Aviation Summit in Gandhinagar that seaplane operations in Lakshadweep would begin "soon."

If trials succeed and the service is brought under the UDAN regional connectivity scheme, fares could drop as low as ₹2,000–₹4,000, compared to an open-market fare of around ₹12,000 for the Kochi–Lakshadweep sector.

12/05/2026 Nitin SJ Asariparambil/The Week

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