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Route turbulence forecast

Cairo Tel-aviv

Turbulence forecast for flights from Cairo International Airport (CAI) to Ben Gurion International Airport (TLV).

Short-haul sector
Distance
392 km
212 nm
Typical duration
56m
Ground-speed estimate
Cruise
FL300
30,000 ft
Jet stream
Minimal — short or tropical route

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Get a segment-by-segment turbulence forecast for any scheduled flight from CAI to TLV, with live wind and pilot reports.

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What to expect on this route

Eastbound (generally tailwind-assisted) · Great-circle bearing 57°

This is a short or low-latitude sector, so clear-air turbulence from upper-level jets is rare. A large portion of the flight crosses open ocean (Mediterranean), where upper-level conditions are generally smoother than over continental terrain.

Ocean / water segments
Mediterranean

Seasonal turbulence pattern

Seasonal turbulence on this route is modest — most variation comes from day-to-day weather rather than strong seasonal cycles.

Peak turbulence
November–March (Northern Hemisphere winter)
Typically calmest
Late spring to early autumn (May–September)

CAITLV turbulence FAQ

Is the Cairo to Tel-aviv flight usually bumpy?

Most of the 392 km route sits in the subtropical band with minimal jet-stream exposure. Historically that means most flights cruise in smooth air, with turbulence limited to short sectors near weather systems.

When is the best time to fly CAI to TLV for a smooth flight?

Statistically, Late spring to early autumn (May–September) sees the calmest conditions for this corridor. Within any season, morning departures see less convective (thunderstorm-driven) turbulence than afternoon flights.

How long is the flight from CAI to TLV?

Block time is usually around 56m direct, cruising at approximately FL300 (30,000 ft). Actual duration varies with winds — tailwinds can shave 15–30 minutes, headwinds can add 30+ minutes on this eastbound sector.

How accurate is Turbcast's forecast for this route?

We use live NOAA Aviation Weather Center pilot reports (PIREPs), SIGMETs and AIRMETs, layered with physics-based Ellrod and Richardson-number calculations from Open-Meteo pressure-level wind and temperature data. If a source is unavailable for a waypoint we show an em dash rather than invent a value.

Related routes

Flying the other way? TLVCAI turbulence forecast →

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