Published on : 08 Apr 2026
Breaking: The Groundforce airport strike is fully active across Spain today β Wednesday April 8, 2026 β the first post-Easter weekday strike day, and a critical moment for hundreds of thousands of UK, Irish, and European passengers flying home from Spanish holiday destinations. Three separate strike windows are running today: 5β7 AM, 11 AMβ5 PM, and 10 PMβmidnight. All 12 Groundforce-operated Spanish airports are affected. Bags are at risk. Departures are delayed. But today is not just a routine strike day β it is the final warning before the most dangerous single day of the entire Groundforce crisis so far. Friday April 10 is both a confirmed Groundforce strike day AND the date the EU Entry/Exit System goes 100% mandatory across all 29 Schengen countries β a simultaneous collision of two independent travel crises at the exact same Spanish airport passport control desks. For UK passengers flying to or through Spain on Friday, the compound effect of slow EES biometric processing AND reduced Groundforce ground handling staffing creates a perfect storm that neither crisis would generate alone. If you are flying to, from, or through Spain today or this week β this is everything you need to know.
Published: April 8, 2026 β Wednesday π΄ LIVE Strike Status TODAY (April 8): π΄ GROUNDFORCE ACTIVE β Wednesday confirmed strike day Strike Windows Today:
Easter is over. Schools are back. Business travel is resuming. And Groundforce workers at 12 Spanish airports are still walking out three times a day, every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, on a pattern that runs through December 31, 2026 unless a wage agreement is reached.
Today is the first Wednesday strike day since Easter Monday. It is NOT a surprise. UGT, CCOO, and USO unions confirmed this pattern when they launched the indefinite strike on March 30, 2026. The dispute has not moved β wages frozen since 2022, unions demanding 7.82%, companies offering 4.58%, SIMA mediation producing no resolution. The strike continues indefinitely on the same schedule.
For passengers, the practical reality of today’s Wednesday strike is this: any flight departing a Groundforce-operated Spanish airport during the three strike windows carries baggage delay risk. Groundforce handles baggage loading, aircraft pushback, ramp services, and passenger boarding for multiple airlines at 12 airports. When strike windows reduce staffing to minimum legal service levels, the airlines can keep their flights operating β but bags may not make it onto the aircraft in time. You may arrive at your destination without your luggage.
The 11 AMβ5 PM window β now actively underway β is the most dangerous of the day. It covers the entire midday and afternoon departure peak, the busiest window for returning holiday passengers from Spain’s coastal and island airports.
π΄ 5:00 AM β 7:00 AM β Early Morning Wave Affects the first wave of departures at Madrid-Barajas, Barcelona El Prat, and mainland airports. Business travellers on early morning departures face slow check-in processing and reduced bag loading capacity.
π΄ 11:00 AM β 5:00 PM β SIX-HOUR PEAK WINDOW (ACTIVE NOW) This is the most damaging strike window of any day. Six consecutive hours covering the entire midday and afternoon departure peak β the slot when the vast majority of UK charter and scheduled flights depart from MΓ‘laga, Alicante, Palma, Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, and Fuerteventura. Every holiday flight departing within this window is at risk of baggage abandonment or delay.
π΄ 10:00 PM β Midnight β Late Evening Wave Affects late evening departures including budget carrier night flights. Passengers on evening departures from the Canary Islands and Balearic Islands are in this window’s risk zone.
| Airport | Code | Key UK Routes at Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Madrid-Barajas | MAD | London Heathrow, Gatwick, Manchester, Birmingham |
| Barcelona El Prat | BCN | London Heathrow, Gatwick, Manchester, Edinburgh |
| MΓ‘laga-Costa del Sol | AGP | London Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester, Bristol, Birmingham, Leeds |
| Alicante-Elche | ALC | London Stansted, Gatwick, Manchester, East Midlands |
| Valencia | VLC | London Gatwick, Bristol, Edinburgh |
| Palma de Mallorca | PMI | London Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester, Bristol, Leeds |
| Ibiza | IBZ | London Gatwick, Manchester |
| Bilbao | BIO | London Heathrow |
| Gran Canaria | LPA | London Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester, Bristol |
| Tenerife Sur | TFS | London Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester, Birmingham, Bristol |
| Tenerife Norte | TFN | London Heathrow connections |
| Lanzarote | ACE | London Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester |
| Fuerteventura | FUE | London Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester |
Airlines using Groundforce at affected airports include: Ryanair Β· easyJet Β· Jet2 Β· TUI Β· Iberia Β· Iberia Express Β· Air Europa Β· Vueling Β· British Airways (at some airports) Β· Wizz Air Β· Norwegian
| Airline | Groundforce Exposure | Primary UK Departure Points |
|---|---|---|
| Ryanair | Very High β present at all 12 airports | Stansted, Gatwick, Bristol, East Midlands, Manchester, Edinburgh, Glasgow |
| easyJet | High β present at 8+ airports | Gatwick, Luton, Manchester, Bristol, Birmingham, Edinburgh |
| Jet2 | High β heavy Canary Islands + Balearics exposure | Manchester, Leeds, East Midlands, Birmingham, Bristol, Newcastle |
| TUI | High β Canaries + Balearics charter peak | Manchester, Birmingham, Bristol, Glasgow, Newcastle |
| Iberia / Iberia Express | High β Madrid hub operations | Heathrow connections |
| Vueling | High β Barcelona hub | Multiple UK points |
| British Airways | Moderate β Madrid and Barcelona | Heathrow |
What every passenger must do right now: β Check your specific flight on your airline’s app before leaving for the airport β If your flight departs between 11 AM and 5 PM local Spanish time β your bags are in the highest risk window β Arrive at the airport 4 hours early if checking luggage on any flight from these 12 airports today β Consider travelling carry-on only if your trip allows it β this is the single most effective protection against baggage disruption
This is the most important section of this article for anyone travelling to Spain this week. Friday April 10 is simultaneously:
These two crises are completely independent in origin. One is a Spanish labour dispute. The other is a pan-European digital border transformation that has been building since October 2025. But they are not independent in impact. They collide at exactly the same chokepoints in Spain’s holiday airports on exactly the same day.
The EU Entry/Exit System (EES) has been in phased rollout since October 12, 2025. Until now, border authorities have been able to partially or fully suspend EES processing during peak periods to prevent queues. From April 10, that flexibility ends. Every single non-EU national β including all UK passport holders since Brexit β must register facial image and fingerprints at the Schengen border on their first crossing. No exceptions. No bypass. No manual stamp instead.
What this means at Spanish airports from Friday:
Specifically, from Friday April 10, border control authorities can no longer suspend EES to clear queues. If the system creates a two-hour queue at passport control in Palma at 3 PM on a Friday β the border officers must keep processing. The queue grows. The airport cannot override it.
On a normal Friday β no strike, no EES β a UK passenger flying Ryanair from Manchester to Palma, landing at noon, clears passport control in 15 minutes, collects bags in 20 minutes, and is at the resort by 2 PM.
On Friday April 10 at Palma (PMI):
This is not a worst-case scenario. It is a reasonable expectation for the busiest UK holiday airport in Europe during the 11 AMβ5 PM Groundforce window on the first day EES has no override mechanism.
Step 1 β Download the Travel to Europe app NOW The EU has released an official app β “Travel to Europe” β available on Apple App Store and Google Play. It allows you to pre-register your passport data and biometric photo up to 72 hours before arrival. This can significantly cut your queue time at the Spanish border. As of April 2026, Spain is running EES at all major airports. Pre-registration via the app is the single fastest way to get through.
Step 2 β Ensure your passport is biometric (look for the gold camera icon on the cover) Biometric passports can use self-service kiosks, which are faster. Non-biometric passports require a manned booth β the slowest lane. If you have a non-biometric passport, budget for 15β30 minutes longer at passport control.
Step 3 β Arrive at the Spanish airport 3 hours before departure (not 2) Airport associations ACI Europe and Airlines for Europe have warned passengers arriving into Schengen countries to allow 1.5β2 extra hours from April 10. For Spain on a strike day, add another 30β60 minutes for baggage. The total pre-departure buffer at a Spanish airport on April 10 should be at least 3 hours.
Step 4 β Know your 90/180 day rule EES will automatically track your total days in the Schengen Area. If you have recently visited any Schengen country, your accumulated days are now recorded. Overstaying β even accidentally β is now detectable in real-time and fines apply (β¬198 in France; varies by country).
Step 5 β Children need individual passports Under EES, every traveller including children requires an individual travel document. School groups can no longer travel on collective passports.
| Date | Day | Strike Status | EES Status | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Today (April 8) | Wednesday | π΄ ACTIVE β 3 windows | Phased rollout | π‘ High |
| April 9 | Thursday | β No strike | Phased rollout | π’ Lower |
| April 10 | Friday | π΄ ACTIVE β 3 windows | π΄ 100% MANDATORY | π΄π΄ DOUBLE CRISIS |
| April 11 | Saturday | β No strike | Fully live | π‘ Moderate (EES queues) |
| April 12 | Sunday | β No strike | Fully live | π‘ Moderate |
| April 13 | Monday | π΄ ACTIVE β 3 windows | Fully live | π΄ High |
| April 14 | Tuesday | β No strike | Fully live | π‘ Moderate |
| April 15 | Wednesday | π΄ ACTIVE β 3 windows | Fully live | π΄ High |
The strike pattern runs indefinitely β every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday β through December 31, 2026, unless a wage agreement is reached. No agreement is currently in sight.
The clearest pattern from the first week of Groundforce strikes (March 30βApril 6) was not mass flight cancellations. It was luggage abandonment. Flights departed on time β without bags. At least six aircraft departed Madrid-Barajas in the first days of the strike without all passenger luggage loaded. Canary Island airports received passengers whose bags had been left at mainland Spanish airports.
Why does this happen? Spain’s minimum services rules require a percentage of Groundforce workers to remain on duty during strikes β enough to keep the terminal operational and aircraft moving β but not enough to guarantee every bag is loaded within every departure window. During the 11 AMβ5 PM peak, with dozens of simultaneous departures across a busy airport like MΓ‘laga or Palma, the reduced crew simply cannot process every bag before pushback.
If you are checking luggage today or Friday: β Remove all medication, electronics, passport, and valuables from checked bags β carry them with you β Photograph every bag before check-in so you can describe it precisely β If your bag doesn’t arrive β file a Property Irregularity Report (PIR) at the baggage desk before leaving the airport. This starts the 21-day compensation clock under the Montreal Convention β Airlines must reimburse essential purchases (toiletries, underwear, basic clothing) while waiting for a delayed bag β keep all receipts
Ground staff strikes are classified as “extraordinary circumstances” under EU261. This means:
| Wait Time | What the Airline Must Provide |
|---|---|
| 2+ hour delay | Meals and refreshments |
| 2+ hour delay | Electronic communication |
| 5+ hour delay | Right to full refund if you choose not to travel |
| Overnight stranding | Hotel accommodation + ground transport |
| Cancelled flight | Full refund OR rebooking β your choice |
The exact words to say at the desk: “I am invoking my right to care under Article 9 of EU Regulation 261/2004. I require meal vouchers / hotel accommodation.”
Iberia issued a flexibility waiver for passengers affected by the strike on routes through Spanish airports. Check iberia.com for the current validity window and rebooking terms.
Any travel insurance purchased after March 21, 2026 β when the Groundforce strike first became a publicly known event β is likely subject to the “known event” exclusion for strike-related claims. If you bought your policy after that date, you may not be covered for strike disruption. If you bought it before March 21, you should be fully covered. File claims within 30 days.
Step 1 β Check your flight before leaving for the airport Open your airline’s app. Check your specific flight number. Verify the current status at aena.es. Set up push notifications. Departure boards update slower than apps.
Step 2 β Arrive 4 hours early if checking baggage The standard 2-hour rule does not apply at Groundforce airports during strike windows. 4 hours is the only safe buffer on a strike day.
Step 3 β Travel carry-on only if your trip allows This is the single most effective protection. If your bag never goes into the Groundforce system, it cannot be abandoned.
Step 4 β Remove essentials from checked bags Medication, passport, phone charger, valuables β carry these with you. No exceptions on a strike day.
Step 5 β If delayed 2+ hours β demand meal vouchers immediately Go to the airline desk. Say: “I am invoking Article 9 EU Regulation 261/2004 β I require meal vouchers.” Keep every receipt.
Step 6 β If cancelled β demand rebooking or full cash refund You choose. The airline does not choose for you.
Step 7 β If stranded overnight β demand hotel accommodation “My flight has been cancelled. Under Article 9 EU261 I require hotel accommodation and ground transport.”
Step 8 β If bags don’t arrive β file a PIR at the airport before you leave Do not go to your hotel and hope the bag appears. File the Property Irregularity Report (PIR) at the arrivals baggage desk before leaving the airport. This is the essential first step for any compensation claim.
If you are flying to Spain on Friday April 10:
If you are flying FROM Spain on Friday April 10:
The Groundforce dispute remains entirely unresolved. The gap between what unions demand (7.82% wage increase) and what companies have offered (4.58%) is significant enough that a quick resolution is not expected. Union representatives have publicly stated the strike will continue through December 31, 2026 if no agreement is reached.
From April 10, EES is permanent β it does not go away. Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday strike day for the rest of 2026 is now also an EES day. The compound effect is a permanent new feature of flying to Spain from the UK on strike days.
Your summer 2026 Spain flight checklist:
| Resource | Link |
|---|---|
| AENA Live Flight Status | aena.es |
| Ryanair Disruption Updates | ryanair.com/en/travel-updates |
| easyJet Disruption Page | easyjet.com/en/disruption |
| Jet2 Live Updates | jet2.com/help |
| TUI Flight Information | tui.co.uk/destinations/help/flights |
| Iberia Strike Waiver | iberia.com |
| British Airways Travel Alerts | britishairways.com/travel-alerts |
| EU261 Rights Official | europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/travel/passenger-rights/air |
| UK CAA Passenger Rights | caa.co.uk/passengers |
| Travel to Europe App (EES pre-registration) | Available on iOS and Android |
| ENAC Italy (for Italian legs) | enac.gov.it |
| FlightAware Tracking | flightaware.com |
Today β Wednesday April 8, 2026 β is a confirmed Groundforce strike day across all 12 Spanish airports. Three windows are active: 5β7 AM, 11 AMβ5 PM, and 10 PMβmidnight. The 11 AMβ5 PM window is the most dangerous β six hours covering the entire afternoon departure peak for hundreds of UK holiday flights from MΓ‘laga, Alicante, Palma, Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, and Fuerteventura.
But the bigger story is Friday April 10. For the first time since this indefinite strike began, a Groundforce strike day coincides exactly with the EU Entry/Exit System going 100% mandatory β no suspensions, no overrides, no flexibility. The result is a double crisis at the same Spanish airport passport control desks: bags delayed by strike action, and passport queues of up to four hours by EES biometric processing. For UK passengers flying to Spain on Friday, this combination is the highest-risk single travel day of the entire post-Easter period.
Today (April 8) β if you are flying from Spain:
Friday (April 10) β if you are flying to Spain:
The Groundforce strike has no end date. EES is now permanent. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday Spain flights carry this double risk for the rest of 2026.
For More Resources:
Related Articles:
Sources: StrikeTracker (UGT/CCOO/USO Groundforce indefinite strike confirmation β April 6β10, 2026), European Commission EES full rollout confirmation (March 30, 2026), Euronews EES April 10 guide (April 6, 2026), Majorca Daily Bulletin EES Spain alert (April 7, 2026), ACI Europe EES queue warnings, AENA (Spain Airport Authority), EU Regulation 261/2004, Travel to Europe official app documentation, Palma Airport Strikes page β April 8, 2026
Posted By : Vinay
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