Published on : 11 May 2026
The strike started at 10:00 this morning. Italian airspace capacity dropped 70% the moment it did.
On May 11, ENAV controllers and easyJet crew strike simultaneously from 10:00 to 18:00, dropping Italian airspace capacity by roughly 70%. Rome, Milan, Naples, and Venice all affected.
If you are at an Italian airport right now, or if you are trying to reach Italy today, or if you have a flight connecting through Rome, Milan, or Naples — stop what you are doing and read this before you do anything else.
ITA Airways has cancelled approximately 38% of its scheduled flights on May 11, 2026. There are Air Traffic Controller and easyJet pilots and cabin crew strikes taking place in Italy on Monday, which will significantly affect flights in the country. Flights between 7am and 10am and between 6pm and 9pm are guaranteed to operate even during these strike events.
Italian business travellers face a chaotic start to the working week after the air-traffic control union UNICA and several airline ground-staff units confirmed an eight-hour national strike for Monday 11 May 2026 running from 10:00 to 18:00. The walk-out, notified under Law 146/1990, will involve ENAV controllers in Rome ACC, easyJet cabin-crew bases, and a series of solidarity stoppages at Rome-Fiumicino, Milan-Linate and Naples-Capodichino airports.
This is not a single strike. It is five overlapping strikes hitting Italy’s aviation system simultaneously — and the compound effect is the most severe single-day disruption to Italian aviation since the COVID groundings. By Sunday evening, easyJet had pre-emptively grounded around 180 rotations — roughly 38% of its Italian schedule. ITA Airways scrapped 130 domestic and European sectors. Rome’s Fiumicino already has the second-highest cancellation count among airports worldwide for today. United Airlines has announced five cancellations for Monday. Fiumicino’s second catastrophe — a ground security strike from 12:00 to 16:00 — arrives four hours into the ATC strike.
And Volotea — an airline your brief did not mention — is on a separate 24-hour national strike today, taking its entire Italian network down simultaneously.
Published: May 11, 2026 — Monday (Strike Day — LIVE) Strike status: 🔴 ACTIVE — 10:00–18:00 Italian time (09:00–17:00 UTC) Time remaining as of publication: Check current time — ATC strike ends 18:00 Italian time ENAV ATC affected: 🔴 Rome Area Control Centre (Rome ACC) — 10:00–18:00 ENAV ATC affected: 🔴 Naples Capodichino tower — 10:00–18:00 easyJet Italy pilot/cabin crew: 🔴 8-hour national strike — 10:00–18:00 — 180 rotations grounded ITA Airways: 🔴 38% of daily schedule cancelled — 130+ sectors — AZ203/204 London–Rome cancelled ADR Security (FCO + CIA): 🔴 4-hour strike — 12:00–16:00 — Fiumicino + Ciampino security GH Palermo / ASC Handling / Aviapartner Palermo: 🔴 4-hour — 12:00–16:00 ALHA + MLE-BCUBE Milan Malpensa: 🔴 4-hour — 13:00–17:00 SOGAER Cagliari: 🔴 4-hour — 13:00–17:00 Volotea: 🔴 24-hour national strike (UILTrasporti) — ALL Volotea Italy flights cancelled today Rome ATAC (buses/trams/metro): 🔴 24-hour strike — ground transport to airports disrupted Protected guaranteed slots: ✅ 07:00–10:00 and 18:00–21:00 Italian time Protected slot delay warning: 60–90 minutes likely even in protected windows due to congestion Airlines pre-rerouting overflights: ✅ Via Milan ACC — avoiding Rome airspace where possible May 12 cascade risk: 🔴 HIGH — aircraft out of position 24–36 hours after today May 24 “Black Day” warning: ⚠️ Threatened if talks fail — full aviation general strike possible Milan–Rome rail: ⚠️ 60% of high-speed seats sold by Sunday evening — book immediately Fiumicino cancellations rank: 2nd highest globally today United Airlines cancellations: 5 flights cancelled for today EU261 cash (ENAV ATC strike): ❌ NO — ATC = extraordinary circumstances EU261 cash (easyJet own-crew strike): ⚠️ CONTESTED — see full analysis below Duty of care (meals/hotel): ✅ YES — always applies regardless of cause ITA Airways refund deadline: May 18, 2026 — call +39 06 85960020
This is not one industrial dispute. It is five independent strikes converging on the same Monday with deliberate coordination. Understanding each one tells you which flights are affected, which are protected, and which rights apply to your specific situation.
Italy’s air-navigation service provider ENAV has confirmed that Uiltrasporti-organised local strikes will shut the Rome Area Control Centre and Naples-Capodichino tower from 10:00 to 18:00 on Monday 11 May 2026. The eight-hour walk-outs coincide with broader nationwide industrial action affecting airport security staff at Rome-Fiumicino and Ciampino and with a separate easyJet crew strike. Rome ACC manages one of Europe’s busiest pieces of airspace; previous stoppages of comparable scope have triggered widespread delays and reroutes across central Italy and the western Mediterranean.
Rome ACC is the Area Control Centre that manages all high-altitude traffic over central and southern Italy — not just Rome’s airports, but every aircraft flying over the Italian peninsula. When Rome ACC goes to minimum services, overflights that would normally cross Italian airspace must reroute around it. Airlines are already pre-emptively rerouting overflights via Milan ACC to avoid delays. This means flights from London to Athens, Paris to Cairo, Frankfurt to Tunis — routes that cross Italian airspace in normal operations — are being diverted north via Austrian airspace or south via Tunisian FIR. Those reroutes add fuel burn, add time, and compress landing slot availability at destination airports.
Naples Capodichino (NAP) tower is simultaneously shut. Naples is southern Italy’s primary airport — the gateway for the Amalfi Coast, Pompeii, the Sorrentine Peninsula, and connections to Capri and Ischia. A closed tower means no arrivals and no departures within the strike window. Protected slots apply (07:00–10:00 and 18:00–21:00) — but the capacity compression during those windows is severe.
Staff of budget airline easyJet, including pilots and flight attendants, have announced an Italy-wide eight-hour strike from 10am to 6pm on Monday May 11th. Italy is set for major air travel disruption on May 11, 2026, as easyJet pilots and cabin crew stage an eight-hour nationwide strike. Airports including Rome, Naples, and Cagliari are expected to face delays and cancellations.
easyJet grounded approximately 180 rotations by Sunday evening — roughly 38% of its entire Italian schedule. This is easyJet’s own crew refusing to fly — not an ATC restriction on easyJet aircraft. The distinction matters critically for compensation rights (see below).
easyJet’s Italy operation is one of its largest in Europe — with bases at Rome Fiumicino, Milan Malpensa, Milan Linate, Naples, Venice, and Catania. The 180 grounded rotations affect easyJet’s Italian domestic network AND its international connections: London Gatwick/Luton/Stansted to Rome, Milan, Naples, Venice and beyond are all in today’s cancellation list.
Airport security personnel at Rome Fiumicino (FCO) and Ciampino (CIA) operated by ADR Security will hold a 4-hour strike from 12:00 to 16:00.
This is the strike that passengers in protected morning slots need to understand most clearly. Your 09:00 departure may be in the protected window and technically guaranteed to operate — but if security processing at Fiumicino slows to minimum staffing levels from 12:00, the passengers who were supposed to have cleared security for the 13:00–17:00 bank are now waiting in an expanding queue that is also absorbing passengers from the 10:00–12:00 gap between the ATC strike starting and the security strike starting. The airport’s landside becomes a pressure vessel.
Fiumicino handles 40+ million passengers per year. ADR Security processes every departing passenger through security screening. A 4-hour partial security shutdown creates a backlog that takes hours to clear — well into the evening.
Staff at GH Palermo, ASC Handling and Aviapartner Palermo will stop work for 4 hours on 11 and 20 May 2026. Ground handling workers at ALHA and MLE-BCUBE at Milan Malpensa Airport will hold a four-hour strike on 11 May 2026 from 13:00 to 17:00. FILT-CGIL, FIT-CISL and UILT-UIL have called a four-hour strike for personnel of the SOGAER group at Cagliari-Elmas.
Ground handlers are the invisible workforce that makes aviation work — aircraft pushback, baggage loading, refuelling coordination, aircraft cleaning. When ground handlers strike at Palermo, Malpensa and Cagliari, flights that technically operate within the protected slots still face: bags not loaded, aircraft cleaning skipped or delayed, pushback delayed. An aircraft cleared for an 09:30 departure but missing its bag loading because the 12:00 ground handler strike started early means a 09:30 that becomes a 12:45.
This is the strike that has received the least coverage but affects the most unexpected passengers.
UILTrasporti called a 24-hour national strike at Volotea over company-level contract issues.
Volotea is a Spanish low-cost carrier that has become one of Italy’s most important domestic and short-haul European operators — connecting smaller Italian cities (Venice, Turin, Verona, Genoa, Olbia, Brindisi, Ancona, Pescara) to each other and to France, Spain, Greece, and Portugal. A 24-hour Volotea strike means the entire Volotea Italy network is down today — not just during the 10:00–18:00 ATC window, but from midnight to midnight.
If you have a Volotea ticket today: you are cancelled. There is no protected window. There is no minimum service. All Volotea Italy flights are affected. Go to volotea.com for refund or rebooking options.
USB Lavoro Privato and ORSA TPL called a 24-hour strike at ATAC affecting buses, trams and metro in Rome, with guarantee bands.
If you are trying to reach Fiumicino or Ciampino from central Rome today: the Leonardo Express train (the most reliable Fiumicino connection from Roma Termini) is NOT operated by ATAC — it is operated by Trenitalia and is unaffected by this strike. But ATAC’s bus routes — including services from many parts of Rome to the airport — are disrupted. Rome’s metro is similarly affected during the strike windows.
Ground transport guide for Rome today: ✅ Leonardo Express (Trenitalia) Roma Termini → Fiumicino: OPERATING — 32 minutes, runs every 15 minutes ✅ Taxi from central Rome: OPERATING — allow 45–75 minutes to Fiumicino depending on traffic ❌ ATAC bus routes to FCO: DISRUPTED during strike windows ❌ ATAC metro Line A/B/C: DISRUPTED during strike windows — check guarantee bands
Rome’s Fiumicino already has the second-highest number of cancellations among airports worldwide for flights starting on Monday.
Fiumicino is carrying three simultaneous strike actions today: ENAV Rome ACC (ATC from 10:00–18:00), ADR Security (security from 12:00–16:00), and all ITA Airways cancellations. This is the most complex simultaneous disruption at any single airport in Europe today.
If you are at Fiumicino right now:
Leonardo Express: OPERATING. The Fiumicino rail link is your most reliable transport to the airport and away from it. Services run every 15 minutes from Roma Termini.
Rome Ciampino is Ryanair’s primary Rome base and the secondary airport for the capital. ADR Security strike 12:00–16:00 at Ciampino compounds the ENAV ATC restriction. Ryanair has not grounded its Italy operations to the same scale as easyJet — but Ryanair flights at Ciampino during the 10:00–18:00 window are subject to ATC restrictions, and the 12:00–16:00 security strike adds a processing bottleneck.
If you have a Ryanair Ciampino flight: Check the Ryanair app for any disruption advisory. Ryanair has issued waivers for Italy-affected passengers — date changes to adjacent dates are typically available fee-free.
The strike is set to last longer at airports in Rome and Naples — eight hours, from 10am to 6pm.
Naples tower is completely shut from 10:00 to 18:00 under the ENAV minimum services order. No arrivals or departures during the strike window outside protected slots. Naples has no alternative local airport — the next-closest operational airport is Bari (2 hours by car) or Rome (2.5 hours by high-speed rail from Naples Centrale).
If your Naples flight is cancelled today: The Naples–Rome high-speed rail (Frecciarossa/Frecciargento) operates approximately every 30–60 minutes from Napoli Centrale to Roma Termini in 70 minutes. This is your fastest alternative to Fiumicino for onward connections. As of Sunday evening, 60% of Milan–Rome high-speed seats were sold — Naples–Rome may be similarly constrained. Book immediately at trenitalia.com.
Milan is managed by Milan ACC (not Rome ACC) and is not directly shut by the ENAV Rome ACC strike. However:
Airlines are pre-emptively rerouting overflights via Milan ACC to avoid Rome airspace. Milan ACC is absorbing significantly more traffic than normal today — which compresses capacity for Milan’s own airport operations.
Venice is not directly covered by the ENAV Rome ACC or Naples tower actions — but easyJet’s crew strike is national, meaning easyJet Venice is affected. Venice’s ground handling is not on the strike list. Risk is primarily from easyJet cancellations and overflight rerouting congestion.
Staff at GH Palermo, ASC Handling and Aviapartner Palermo and SOGAER group at Cagliari-Elmas are striking from midday. Island airports with limited frequency — a single cancelled flight represents a significant percentage of the day’s capacity.
The confirmed ITA Airways cancellation list runs to over 120 flight numbers, spanning domestic routes — Catania, Palermo, Naples, Florence, Venice — and short-haul European connections to Paris, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Brussels, Madrid, Barcelona, Athens, and Zürich. The London–Rome service (AZ 203 inbound, AZ 204 outbound) is also cancelled, which matters directly for UK-based travellers.
London–Rome specifically: AZ 203 (London Heathrow → Rome Fiumicino) and AZ 204 (Rome Fiumicino → London Heathrow) are both cancelled. UK passengers booked on ITA Airways’ London service today need to contact ITA immediately for rebooking or refund.
Full ITA Airways cancellation list: ita-airways.com → Flight Status section (updated in real time)
ITA Airways rebooking/refund: Passengers who have purchased an ITA Airways ticket to travel on 11 May, in case of cancellation or change of schedule, may change their booking without any penalty or request a refund no later than 18 May by calling +39 06 85960020 from Italy or abroad, or by contacting the travel agency where the ticket was purchased.
Today’s strike involves three different types of industrial action — and each type has a different EU261 compensation classification. This is the most legally nuanced part of this article and the question every affected passenger is asking.
ENAV controllers are NOT employees of any airline. The ATC strike is conducted by workers external to the carriers. This classifies as an extraordinary circumstance under EU261 — eliminating the right to cash compensation.
This is the same classification that applies to the SAERCO ATC strike in Spain. It has been consistently upheld by EU courts. If your ITA Airways, Ryanair, Lufthansa, or any carrier’s flight is cancelled or delayed specifically because Rome ACC or Naples tower is shut under the ENAV strike — you are not entitled to €250–€600 cash compensation.
This is where it gets legally interesting. The classification of airline own-staff strikes as “extraordinary circumstances” has been contested in European courts since the 2018 Krüsemann case, where the European Court of Justice ruled that a Ryanair pilot strike was NOT an extraordinary circumstance and EU261 compensation DID apply.
For easyJet’s Italy pilot and cabin crew strike today: the argument for EU261 applying runs as follows — easyJet’s own pilots and flight attendants are striking, which is within the airline’s sphere of normal operations, and which easyJet had advance notice of and time to manage. Some EU national courts and regulators have applied Krüsemann to crew strikes, requiring airlines to pay EU261 compensation even for own-staff walkouts.
Practical advice: File an EU261 claim for your cancelled easyJet flight regardless. State that the cause was easyJet’s own crew strike, cite the Krüsemann precedent, and let the airline respond. If easyJet rejects the claim citing extraordinary circumstances, escalate to the UK CAA (UK261) or your national aviation regulator. Some claims will succeed; some will not.
What easyJet owes regardless: Duty of care, refund, and rebooking — these are unconditional.
Regardless of which strike caused your disruption:
✅ Full cash refund if your flight is cancelled and you choose not to travel — unconditional, within 7 days ✅ Meals and refreshments for delays of 2+ hours — ask at the check-in or gate desk ✅ Hotel accommodation for overnight cancellations — ask the airline to arrange ✅ Transport to/from hotel — airline obligation for overnight disruption ✅ Rebooking on next available flight if you wish to travel
easyJet waiver: Check easyjet.com → Manage Bookings → Disruptions for the Italy May 11 travel advisory. easyJet has issued waivers allowing free date changes for affected passengers.
easyJet refund: easyjet.com → Help Centre → Refund request. Also accessible through the easyJet app.
ITA Airways waiver: Free rebooking without penalty through May 18. Call +39 06 85960020.
Ryanair waiver: ryanair.com → My Trips → any Italy disruption advisory.
Italy’s high-speed rail network — Trenitalia’s Frecciarossa and Italo’s trains — is the most viable alternative for passengers whose Italian flights are cancelled today. But availability is rapidly depleting.
As of Sunday evening: 60% of Milan–Rome high-speed train seats were already sold. That means 40% remain — but with today’s strike cancellations driving thousands of passengers to the rail booking sites simultaneously, that 40% may be gone within hours of publication.
Key Frecciarossa routes today:
| Route | Time | Duration | Book at |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rome (FCO→Termini taxi) → Milan | Every 30 min | 3hrs | trenitalia.com or Italo |
| Naples → Rome | Every 30–60 min | 70 min | trenitalia.com |
| Milan → Venice | Every 30 min | 2hrs 20min | trenitalia.com |
| Florence → Rome | Every 30 min | 1hr 30min | trenitalia.com |
| Bologna → Rome | Every 30–60 min | 2hrs | trenitalia.com |
Book immediately: trenitalia.com or italotreno.it. Search today’s date. Select “First Class” or “Business” if Standard is sold out — pricing may be higher than normal but availability may remain where standard class is full.
The Rome–Milan journey specifically: 3 hours by Frecciarossa vs 1 hour 15 minutes by air. On a day when Italian airspace is 70% reduced, the train is functionally faster when you include airport time, security, and probable delays.
Knock-on effects will extend into May 12 as aircraft and crews reposition across the network.
Today’s 180 easyJet cancellations leave 180 aircraft out of position. Each of those aircraft was supposed to complete 3–4 sectors today, ending at a specific base for tomorrow’s morning departures. With the aircraft grounded in the wrong place — or positioned at Italian bases when they should have ferried to London, Madrid, or Amsterdam — tomorrow’s easyJet schedule across Europe will carry residual disruption for 24–36 hours.
If you have an easyJet flight anywhere in Europe on May 12: Track your aircraft’s inbound rotation using the easyJet app or FlightRadar24. If your aircraft is currently positioned at an Italian base as a result of today’s disruption, your departure may be late or cancelled tomorrow even if the Italian strikes have ended.
On May 24, a “Black Day” of strikes is threatened if talks fail — a full aviation general strike across Italy that would dwarf today’s disruption.
Today’s coordinated five-strike day is a show of force by Italian transport unions ahead of government and management negotiations scheduled for later this week. If those negotiations fail to produce progress on pay, staffing, and working conditions, the unions have threatened to escalate to a general aviation strike on May 24 — a “Black Day” that would affect every airline, every airport, and every ground handler in Italy simultaneously.
May 24 is a Saturday — the peak outbound day for UK summer holidays departing to Italy. The Cannes Film Festival (May 12–23) closes the day before. Monaco Grand Prix weekend begins the day after (May 25). Nice Airport, Rome, Milan, Venice and Florence would all be simultaneously affected on the single highest-value Saturday of Italy’s tourist season.
If you have Italy travel on or around May 24: Monitor Italian transport news closely this week. If talks collapse and a May 24 “Black Day” is confirmed, your options narrow rapidly. Act before Tuesday’s talks conclude rather than after.
Step 1 — Check your flight status:
Step 2 — Determine which strike window your flight falls in:
Step 3 — If your flight is cancelled:
Step 4 — Duty of care: At 2+ hour delay, go to the airline desk: “My flight has been delayed over two hours. Under Article 9 of EU Regulation 261/2004, I am requesting meal vouchers.”
Step 5 — EU261 claim (easyJet own-crew): File at easyjet.com → Help → EU261 Claim. Cite Krüsemann precedent. Escalate to UK CAA or national regulator if rejected.
| Airline | Action | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| easyJet | easyjet.com → Manage Bookings | 0330 365 5000 (UK) |
| ITA Airways | ita-airways.com → Flight Status | +39 06 85960020 |
| Ryanair | ryanair.com → My Trips | 0871 246 0000 (UK) |
| Volotea | volotea.com → Manage Booking | Customer service via site |
| Lufthansa | lufthansa.com → My Bookings | +49 69 86 799 799 |
| British Airways | ba.com → Manage My Booking | 0800 727 800 (UK) |
| Vueling | vueling.com → Manage Booking | +34 931 51 81 58 |
Rome ATC real-time status: enav.it Italian rail alternative: trenitalia.com · italotreno.it Strike Tracker Italy: striketracker.app/strikes-in-italy UK CAA (EU261 escalation): caa.co.uk/passengers EU261 claim support: airhelp.com · flightright.eu
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Posted By : Vinay
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