Lufthansa Cabin Crew Strike April 15–16, 2026: 80–90% of Flights Cancelled at Frankfurt & Munich — 4th Strike in a Week — Full EU261 €600 Compensation & Rebooking Guide for UK, US & Australian Passengers

Published on : 15 Apr 2026

Lufthansa Cabin Crew Strike April 15–16, 2026: 80–90% of Flights Cancelled at Frankfurt & Munich — 4th Strike in a Week — Full EU261 €600 Compensation & Rebooking Guide for UK, US & Australian Passengers

UPDATE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW: Lufthansa has now been in effective meltdown for a full working week. The pilots’ 48-hour walkout ends tonight — and cabin crew immediately take over.

Lufthansa’s cabin crew union has just announced their second strike within a week, right after the pilot strike ends, impacting all German airports including the Frankfurt and Munich hubs on April 15–16, 2026. This will result in many, if not most, flights being cancelled — Lufthansa expects that 80–90% of all flights will be affected.

UFO has announced a second cabin crew strike this week, running Wednesday April 15 to Thursday April 16. This targets Lufthansa and Lufthansa CityLine across all German airports. The back-to-back nature of these strikes means continuous disruption from Monday April 13 through Thursday April 16 — four straight days of severely reduced Lufthansa operations.

This is the fourth Lufthansa strike action in a single week and the most severe so far in terms of expected cancellation rates. If you have any Lufthansa or Lufthansa CityLine flight today or tomorrow — act immediately.


Published: April 15, 2026 —
Strike dates: Wednesday April 15 + Thursday April 16, 2026
Strike start: 00:00 CET Wednesday April 15 (midnight tonight)
Strike end: End of Thursday April 16, 2026
Union: UFO — Unabhängige Flugbegleiter Organisation (Independent Flight Attendants’ Organisation)
Carriers affected: Lufthansa (LH) + Lufthansa CityLine (CL) — both at all German airports
Cancellation forecast: 80–90% of all scheduled Lufthansa flights — worse than the pilot strike
Airports hit: Frankfurt (FRA) · Munich (MUC) · Hamburg (HAM) · Berlin-Brandenburg (BER) · Düsseldorf (DUS) · Cologne (CGN) · Bremen (BRE) · Stuttgart (STR) · Hanover (HAJ)
Carriers NOT affected: SWISS · Austrian Airlines · Brussels Airlines · Air Dolomiti · Discover Airlines · Edelweiss · Lufthansa City Airlines · Eurowings
Free rebooking window: Any Lufthansa Group flight through April 23, 2026
EU261 compensation: ✅ YES — up to €600 per passenger (own-staff strike, not extraordinary circumstances)
Root cause: Unresolved pay and working conditions dispute between UFO and Lufthansa management — identical dispute that triggered the April 10 cabin crew walkout
Deliberate timing: UFO confirmed the strike targets Lufthansa’s 100th anniversary celebrations on April 15–16


The Four-Strike Week That Has Paralysed Lufthansa

To understand why April 15–16 is so severe, you need to see the full context. Lufthansa has not had a single normal operating day since Friday April 10:

Date Strike Union Scale
Friday April 10 Cabin crew walkout UFO ~580 cancellations · ~90,000 passengers
Monday April 13 Pilots’ strike Day 1 Vereinigung Cockpit (VC) ~900 cancellations · Frankfurt #1 globally
Tuesday April 14 Pilots’ strike Day 2 Vereinigung Cockpit (VC) ~555 cancellations · 122 total + 743 delays combined
Wednesday April 15 Cabin crew strike Day 1 UFO 80–90% forecast
Thursday April 16 Cabin crew strike Day 2 UFO 80–90% forecast

As pilots’ strike action concluded around midnight on April 14, fresh disruption loomed immediately ahead. The Independent Flight Attendants’ Organisation (UFO) announced a separate two-day cabin crew walkout scheduled for April 15–16, affecting the same Frankfurt and Munich hubs plus Lufthansa CityLine operations. This sequential strike pattern creates a compounding disruption scenario. Even as pilots return to normal operations, cabin crews withdraw services, preventing any meaningful network recovery. Passengers holding rebookings for April 15 or 16 flights face high likelihood of further cancellations rather than smooth reboarding.

The 80–90% cancellation figure for April 15–16 is significantly higher than the approximately 33% short-haul and 50% long-haul that operated during the pilot strike. Cabin crew are essential to every commercial passenger flight — without them, no aircraft can legally depart regardless of whether pilots are available.


Why This Cabin Crew Strike Is Worse Than the Pilot Walkout

During the April 13–14 pilot strike, Lufthansa managed to operate roughly a third of its short-haul schedule by deploying cabin crew on flights staffed by non-striking pilots and by rerouting passengers through SWISS and Austrian hubs. That partial buffer does not exist this week.

The cabin crew strikes on April 15–16 are expected to ground 80–90% of all flights — check your specific flight on lufthansa.com.

The reason for the higher cancellation rate is structural. During a pilots’ strike, Lufthansa can operate some flights with pilots who are not union members or who choose to cross the picket line. During a cabin crew strike, every single passenger aircraft requires a legally mandated minimum number of cabin attendants. Lufthansa CityLine, which operates regional feeder routes into Frankfurt and Munich that feed the entire hub network, is also fully struck — meaning connections that survive a long-haul cancellation cannot be replaced by regional feeders either.

The timing amplifies labour movement effectiveness. Sequential strikes maintain service disruption continuously, preventing operational normalisation between industrial actions. This strategy pressures management to concede to union demands rather than endure rolling labour conflict throughout spring travel season.

The deliberate timing also carries symbolic weight. Industry observers note the particular irony of strike timing. Lufthansa was planning centennial celebrations in Frankfurt during the week, marking the airline’s 100-year history. Cabin crew leaders have publicly stated that their action deliberately draws attention to working conditions at a moment when company leadership celebrates corporate milestones.


What Is Being Disputed — and Why It Is Not Close to Resolution

Both disputes that have driven this week’s action are separate in their formal demands but share a common thread: Lufthansa management has publicly stated it will not move significantly on either front.

UFO cabin crew dispute (October 2025 → today): The UFO union has been in collective bargaining since October 2025. Their demands centre on improved pay progression, enhanced job security guarantees, and protections for cabin crew at Lufthansa CityLine — the subsidiary Lufthansa has flagged for potential restructuring. A UFO spokesperson said: “Over the past few months, the employers have made it clear that they are unwilling to adequately address our demands and are stalling. For this reason, negotiations have failed. We are therefore forced to enforce our demands through a strike.”

Vereinigung Cockpit pilots’ dispute (September 2025 → today): VC has been in dispute since September 2025 over pension scheme restructuring and wage inflation compensation. Lufthansa management’s head of HR Michael Niggemann has publicly stated: “Given the low margin at Lufthansa Classic, which in itself would not allow for investment in new aircraft, there is no scope for further increases. Strikes will not change this.” Mediated talks facilitated by the German Federal Labour Ministry collapsed on April 7 after eleven hours without agreement.

The hardline positions on both sides mean the probability of a negotiated settlement before additional strike action is announced is low. With no settlement reached between Lufthansa and its flight crew, the likelihood of further industrial action during the summer is high.


Every German Airport Affected Today and Tomorrow

The cabin crew union UFO has announced a strike at Lufthansa and Lufthansa CityLine at short notice for Wednesday April 15 and Thursday April 16, 2026. Flight cancellations will be loaded into booking systems by Tuesday morning April 14 (CET) at the latest.

All nine German airports where Lufthansa and CityLine operate are within scope. Frankfurt and Munich face the most severe impact as Lufthansa’s primary global hubs, but regional airports are also hit by the CityLine component of the strike:

Primary hubs (most cancellations):

  • Frankfurt (FRA) — Lufthansa’s largest global hub. On Monday alone it topped the global cancellations list with 271 flights scrubbed. Expect comparable or worse today.
  • Munich (MUC) — Second hub. 175 cancellations Monday. Again heavily affected Wednesday and Thursday.

Secondary airports (Lufthansa CityLine feeders also struck): Hamburg · Berlin-Brandenburg · Düsseldorf · Cologne/Bonn · Bremen · Stuttgart · Hanover


Carriers NOT Affected — Your Best Rebooking Options

Flights operated by Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, SWISS, Air Dolomiti, Discover Airlines, Edelweiss, and Lufthansa City Airlines will not be affected by the strike.

This is the single most important practical point for UK, US and Australian passengers who have Lufthansa bookings on April 15–16 and are trying to reroute. Within the Lufthansa Group, these carriers are your best options:

SWISS (LX) — hub: Zurich (ZRH) Extensive European network, transatlantic services to New York JFK, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, Boston, San Francisco, Washington. If you have a Lufthansa ticket, ask to be rebooked onto SWISS via Zurich — this is a within-group rebook and should be processed on the same booking reference.

Austrian Airlines (OS) — hub: Vienna (VIE) Strong Central and Eastern European network, long-haul to North America and Asia. Vienna offers connections across the continent and serves as an alternative gateway for UK, US and Australian passengers.

Brussels Airlines (SN) — hub: Brussels (BRU) African network is the specialty, plus European short-haul. Useful for passengers rerouting to African destinations that normally fly via Frankfurt.

Air Dolomiti (EN) — smaller regional carrier, primarily Italian domestic, limited UK/US/Australia relevance.

Non-Group alternatives (independent booking): If your cancelled flight was on Lufthansa, ask to be rebooked onto SWISS, Austrian, or Brussels Airlines — they share the same booking systems and operate from nearby European hubs. If you’re based in the Gulf or South Asia, you may have better luck booking fresh on carriers that bypass Germany entirely: Emirates — hub at Dubai, extensive European network.

Other options worth checking directly for availability:

  • British Airways via London Heathrow — extensive European and transatlantic network
  • Air France via Paris CDG — strong European and Middle East connectivity
  • KLM via Amsterdam Schiphol — currently suspended to Dubai but otherwise operating
  • Turkish Airlines via Istanbul — one of the most comprehensive European hub alternatives

Your Full EU261 and UK261 Rights — Why You Are Owed Up to €600

This is the most important section for UK, US and Australian passengers.

Can Lufthansa call this an “extraordinary circumstance” to avoid paying compensation?

No. Under EC 261, the EU regulation that protects air passengers, Lufthansa cannot class this as extraordinary circumstances — the legal threshold that would let them off the hook. A pilot strike — or a cabin crew strike — involves workers within the airline’s own organisation. An air traffic control strike, for example, involves workers outside the airline’s organisation, so it does qualify as extraordinary circumstances. A cabin crew or pilot’s own-strike does not. Lufthansa’s own cabin crew walking out is Lufthansa’s responsibility — and that means you have rights.

Under EU Regulation 261/2004, strikes by airline staff such as pilots or cabin crew are generally not considered extraordinary circumstances. That means the airline may still be required to pay compensation when flights are cancelled or arrive significantly late because of internal strike action.

Compensation amounts you are owed (EU261 / UK261):

Flight distance EU261 (€) UK261 (£ equivalent)
Under 1,500 km €250 ~£220
1,500–3,500 km €400 ~£350
Over 3,500 km €600 ~£520

This applies to:

  • ✅ Any cancelled flight, regardless of the reason given, if notice was given less than 14 days before departure
  • ✅ Any flight that departs more than 3 hours late at your final destination
  • ✅ Any passenger — British, American, Australian, Canadian — if the flight departs from an EU airport on any airline, OR arrives into an EU airport on an EU-licensed carrier

UK261 note for British passengers: The UK retained EU261 word-for-word after Brexit as UK261. It applies to all flights departing UK airports on any carrier, and to arrivals into the UK on UK-licensed carriers (British Airways, Jet2, easyJet, etc.). For Lufthansa flights departing Frankfurt, Munich or any German airport, EU261 applies. For Lufthansa flights departing London Heathrow to Frankfurt, UK261 applies on departure and EU261 applies if you are connecting onward.

What you are entitled to beyond compensation:


Duty of care during the wait: Meals and refreshments for delays of 2+ hours, regardless of cause
Hotel accommodation and transport: For overnight waits caused by cancellations within airline control
Free rebooking onto next available flight to your final destination, at no additional cost — including onto other airlines within the group or, if group options are unavailable, onto competing carriers
Full refund if you choose not to travel at all

What you must do to claim compensation:

  1. Keep your cancellation notice — screenshot the Lufthansa app notification or email
  2. Note the time you received notice of cancellation relative to your original departure
  3. Record your actual arrival time at your final destination (for delay claims)
  4. Submit directly via: lufthansa.com → Manage Booking → Feedback/Complaint → Flight Disruption
  5. If Lufthansa refuses or ignores: escalate to AirHelp (airhelp.com), Flightright (flightright.eu), or the UK Civil Aviation Authority (caa.co.uk/passengers) for UK-departing flights

You have up to 3 years to file a compensation claim in most EU countries and in the UK.


Lufthansa’s Free Rebooking Waiver — Act Before Availability Disappears

Passengers holding tickets from Lufthansa, Austrian, SWISS, Brussels Airlines or Air Dolomiti, issued on or before April 13, 2026, and booked on Lufthansa-operated flights (including Lufthansa CityLine) on April 13, 14, 15 and 16 April 2026, may rebook free of charge to another Lufthansa Group flight before April 23, 2026 via the Lufthansa Help Center, or request a refund for their ticket before their ticketed travel date via the Help & Contact Center.

The extended rebooking window runs through April 23 — giving you nine days to find an alternative Lufthansa Group service. However, space on SWISS and Austrian services is already under pressure from the 100,000+ passengers displaced by the pilot strike. Act today, not on the day of travel.

Step-by-step rebooking:

  1. Open the Lufthansa app or go to lufthansa.com
  2. Navigate to: Manage My Booking → enter booking reference + name
  3. Select “Rebook affected flight”
  4. Look for available flights on Lufthansa, SWISS, Austrian, or Brussels Airlines through April 23
  5. If no options show in the app, call +44 371 945 9747 (UK) or +1 800 645 3880 (US)
  6. If the call queue is more than 30 minutes, use the Lufthansa Chat Assistant at lufthansa.com

Deutsche Bahn train alternative: For domestic German routes cancelled by the strike — Frankfurt to Munich, Frankfurt to Hamburg, Frankfurt to Berlin, Munich to Cologne — Lufthansa is offering free conversion of flight tickets into Deutsche Bahn rail tickets. This is valid on the day of issue and the following day. Ask at the airport check-in desk or via the app. You do not need to accept the train — it is an option, not a requirement. You can still claim compensation if you arrive 3+ hours late by train.


If You Are Connecting Through Frankfurt or Munich

The cascade effect of four consecutive strike days means aircraft are severely out of position. Even when the cabin crew strike ends Thursday night, Lufthansa will face a multi-day operational recovery as aircraft and crew reposition across the network.

If your journey involves Frankfurt or Munich as a connecting hub — whether on Lufthansa or on a connecting partner — consider the following:

Arriving INTO Frankfurt or Munich Thursday on another carrier, connecting onto Lufthansa: Your Lufthansa onward flight has a very high probability of being cancelled. Contact Lufthansa today to understand your rerouting options before you travel to the airport. Do not assume the connection will operate just because the connecting segment shows as “scheduled.”

Transatlantic passengers connecting through Frankfurt: Lufthansa has historically maintained approximately 60% of long-haul services during cabin crew strikes, prioritising connections to North America and Asia. However, the 80–90% overall cancellation forecast suggests even long-haul is more heavily impacted this week. Check your specific flight at lufthansa.com → Flight Status.

The SWISS/Austrian alternative: The simplest option: ask Lufthansa to rebook you onto SWISS via Zurich or Austrian Airlines via Vienna. Both operate extensive European networks and are unaffected by the German union strikes. Brussels Airlines via Brussels is another option. Since these are all Lufthansa Group airlines, rebooking should be straightforward through the same ticket.


What Happens After April 16 — Is More Strike Action Coming?

The honest answer is: very likely, yes. Neither dispute has been resolved. The UFO cabin crew negotiations have been deadlocked for six months. The VC pilots’ pension dispute has been running for seven months. Federal Labour Ministry mediation collapsed on April 7. Lufthansa management has publicly stated wages cannot increase further.

The likelihood of further industrial action during the summer is high.

Aviation analysts at Advito and travel industry publications are already warning corporate travel managers to build contingency plans for further Lufthansa disruptions in May and June — the beginning of Europe’s peak summer travel season. The most likely scenario is that UFO and VC continue to call rolling short-notice strikes until management either makes a meaningful concession or both sides agree to binding arbitration.

For passengers with Lufthansa bookings in May, June or July 2026, the practical guidance is:

  • Book flexible or fully refundable fares where possible
  • Check whether your booking includes SWISS/Austrian as code-share alternatives — these are safer bets
  • Consider whether your itinerary can be restructured through Heathrow (British Airways), Amsterdam (KLM), Paris (Air France) or Istanbul (Turkish Airlines) rather than Frankfurt or Munich
  • Purchase travel insurance that explicitly covers airline strike disruption — for future bookings, check that “industrial action” is covered

Step-by-Step Action Plan for April 15–16

If you are flying Lufthansa or CityLine TODAY (Wednesday April 15):

Check your flight status NOW — lufthansa.com → Flight Status → enter your flight number. If it shows cancelled, start the rebooking process immediately.

Rebook digitally first — the Lufthansa app and website are faster than phone queues today. Try to secure a SWISS or Austrian alternative before the day of travel begins.

Do not go to the airport unless your flight is confirmed operating — Frankfurt and Munich will be extremely congested with rebooking queues and stranded passengers from earlier strike days.

If your flight is operating under the 10–20% that remain — arrive at least 3 hours early. Ground handling will be under pressure and check-in queues long.

Claim your EU261 compensation — keep all notifications and document your disruption. You have 3 years to claim but the evidence is easiest to gather now.

If you are flying TOMORROW (Thursday April 16):

Check cancellations loaded by Tuesday morning — Lufthansa confirmed cancellation lists are being loaded this morning. If your Thursday flight is not already showing as cancelled, monitor it through the day.

Rebook now if you have flexibility — the April 17 Lufthansa schedule may be reduced as aircraft and crew recover from four days of strikes. Consider booking through Friday April 18 for more reliability.

SAERCO ATC strike alert for April 17 — a completely separate crisis begins at midnight Friday: SAERCO air traffic controllers begin an indefinite strike at 14 Spanish airports including Lanzarote, Fuerteventura and Sevilla. If your April 17 onwards travel involves any of those airports, see the dedicated SAERCO article below.


Lufthansa Strike Timeline: April 2026 at a Glance

The April 2026 industrial action is part of a pattern stretching back to February:

  • February 12–13: VC + UFO coordinated 24-hour strike — widespread cancellations
  • March 12–13: VC pilot strike — two-day walkout
  • April 8: Verdi public sector warning strike — 11 airports shut, 3,400+ flights grounded (separate dispute)
  • April 10: UFO cabin crew strike — ~580 cancellations, 90,000 passengers
  • April 13–14: VC pilot strike — 865+ disruptions, 100,000+ passengers
  • April 15–16 (TODAY + TOMORROW): UFO cabin crew strike again — 80–90% cancellations forecast

Six strike actions across two months. No resolution in sight.


Key Contacts and Resources

Check your flight status:

  • lufthansa.com → Flight Status
  • FlightAware: flightaware.com (search FRA or MUC for live cancellations)

Rebook or request a refund:

  • lufthansa.com → Manage My Booking
  • Lufthansa Chat Assistant: lufthansa.com/chat
  • UK passengers: +44 371 945 9747
  • US passengers: +1 800 645 3880
  • Australian passengers: +61 2 9367 3800

Claim EU261/UK261 compensation:

  • AirHelp: airhelp.com (no-win-no-fee)
  • Flightright: flightright.eu
  • UK Civil Aviation Authority: caa.co.uk/passengers
  • Direct to Lufthansa: lufthansa.com/feedback

Deutsche Bahn train alternative:

  • bahn.de (book from your cancellation confirmation)

Related Articles:

Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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