Airlines, including those with Swiss passengers, are paying substantial fees to the Taliban for flying over Afghanistan, creating a multi-million dollar revenue stream for the regime without any corresponding air safety services being provided.

"We are still cancelling our flights to Dubai and Tel Aviv."
A staggering $70 million is flowing into Taliban coffers annually as the regime exploits its geographic position to tax global aviation. Every single aircraft traversing Afghan airspace is hit with a flat $700 (CHF 548) fee, a mandatory toll that has transformed the country's sky into a lucrative cash cow. With nearly 2,000 flights per week now surging through this corridorâa fivefold increase from just twelve months agoâthe regime is netting approximately $1.4 million every seven days. This is no longer a marginal revenue stream; it is a vital financial lifeline for a pariah state. While European nations distribute fees through sophisticated organizations like Eurocontrol to fund high-tech safety infrastructure, the Talibanâs collection process is primitive yet ruthlessly efficient. Airlines must register via email and pay the flat rate regardless of aircraft weight or distance traveled. This 'pay-to-play' system ensures that every Swiss passenger flying to Asia is indirectly contributing to the Talibanâs treasury, creating a moral and financial dilemma for the international community.
Airlines are being squeezed into Afghan airspace by a geopolitical vice that has closed off traditional routes. To the north, the sky is a no-go zone due to the protracted war in Ukraine; to the south, escalating conflict in the Middle East has rendered previous corridors over the Levant increasingly hazardous. This leaves carriers with a grim choice: burn excessive fuel on massive detours or pay the Taliban for passage. The result is an unprecedented concentration of traffic over one of the world's most unstable regions. Major carriers, including those serving Swiss hubs, have been forced to recalibrate their flight paths, increasingly relying on a narrow corridor that spans Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia. While Saudi fees average $800 based on weight and distance, the Talibanâs flat-rate fee remains a constant, unavoidable cost of doing business in a world where safe airspaces are rapidly shrinking. The sky is getting smaller, and the price of passage is rising in tandem with global instability.
The Taliban is charging premium prices for a service that effectively does not exist. Unlike Switzerlandâs Skyguide, which received CHF 623 million last year to provide world-class monitoring and safety, the Afghan authorities provide virtually zero air traffic control. In a chilling throwback to early aviation, pilots transiting the region must look out for one another, using radio frequencies to actively broadcast their altitude, speed, and position to avoid mid-air collisions. This 'self-policing' occurs at altitudes of approximately 10,000 metersâa height specifically chosen to keep multi-million dollar jets out of the reach of shoulder-mounted rocket launchers. The irony is sharp: airlines are paying millions to a regime that offers no radar, no guidance, and no emergency support. The 'service' being purchased is not safety, but merely the permission to exist in Afghan air. It is a protection racket at 30,000 feet, where the only guarantee is that the aircraft won't be targeted by the very people collecting the fees.
For the Swiss traveler, the cost of global instability is hitting the wallet with surgical precision. SWISS International Air Lines has already confirmed the cancellation of routes to Dubai and Tel Aviv, while Tui Suisse reports a dramatic shift in demand. As direct flights to Asia become up to twice as expensive as those with stopovers, passengers are being forced to choose between exorbitant prices and routes that funnel money directly to the Taliban. The Swiss tourism giant Tui has already pulled all trips to the UAE, Qatar, and Oman through late April, signaling a massive pivot toward Western destinations like the Caribbean and the Balearic Islands. This shift isn't just about preference; itâs a reaction to a broken aviation map. As long as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East persist, the Taliban will continue to enjoy an effortless windfall at the expense of the global traveler. For Switzerland, a nation built on connectivity, the 'Afghan Tax' represents a troubling new reality in international travel: the price of a ticket now includes a mandatory contribution to a regime the West spent two decades fighting.