Published on : 09 Jun 2026
Rome’s busiest airport is not waiting for the Italy strike calendar to produce a crisis. Today — June 9, 2026 — Leonardo da Vinci International Airport recorded 266 delays and 4 cancellations before the next wave of Italian industrial action has even begun. And that next wave is four days away.
Leonardo da Vinci International Airport descended into operational chaos on June 9, 2026, with 266 flight delays and 4 cancellations cascading across Italy’s travel network. The disruptions affected carriers including KLM, ITA Airways, easyJet, Wizz Air, British Airways, Air France, Lufthansa, Delta Air Lines, Jet2, and Air India, leaving thousands of passengers scrambling for alternatives. ITA Airways bore the brunt with 92 delayed flights, while easyJet reported 21 delays. Wizz Air experienced 7 delays, Jet2 5 delays. KLM took a different hit: 2 cancelled flights plus 1 delayed service.
Flights arriving from major European hubs including Amsterdam, London, Paris, and Frankfurt, as well as Mediterranean cities including Malta, Athens, and Barcelona, were delayed, impacting onward travel connections for hundreds of passengers. Departure operations from Rome were similarly affected, with travellers to destinations across Italy and Europe experiencing extended boarding waits.
Today’s disruption at Fiumicino is not happening in isolation. It is the pre-strike pressure building in a network that is about to absorb a significantly more complex disruption event on Saturday June 13 — a four-layer Italian aviation crisis involving easyJet’s national Italy cabin crew and pilot strike, ENAV air traffic controllers at Verona, ground workers at Cagliari-Elmas, and ground staff at Milan Linate, all walking out simultaneously.
If you have flights to, from, or through Italy this week — today’s 270 Fiumicino disruptions and Saturday’s four-layer strike calendar require immediate attention.
Published: June 9, 2026 — Tuesday (Day 70 · Italy Aviation Crisis · Pre-Strike Week) Rome Fiumicino (FCO) total: 266 delays + 4 cancellations = 270 disruptions ITA Airways: 92 delays — worst carrier at FCO today by enormous margin easyJet: 21 delays KLM: 2 cancellations + 1 delay — highest cancellation count today Wizz Air: 7 delays Jet2: 5 delays British Airways: 5 delays Air France, Lufthansa, Delta, Air India: 2–10 delays each confirmed Routes disrupted: Amsterdam · London Heathrow + Gatwick · Paris CDG · Frankfurt · Malta · Athens · Barcelona + domestic Italy Cascading airports: AMS · LHR · LGW · CDG · FRA · MLA · ATH · BCN Italy June 13 strike — FOUR LAYERS: — easyJet Italy cabin crew + pilots: 06:00–24:00 national (18 hours) — ENAV Verona Airport ATC: 06:00–24:00 (18 hours) — SOGAER Cagliari-Elmas ground staff: 06:00–24:00 (18 hours) — Sky Service Milan Linate ground staff: 12:00–16:00 (4 hours) Italy June 26: Nationwide 24-hour ground handling — ALL Italian airports — no minimum service Italy June 19–20: General strike 21:00 June 19 → 21:00 June 20 — rail + bus + metro Italy July 5: CUB Trasporti national aviation + Fiumicino/Ciampino security 10:00–18:00 Protected time windows June 13: 07:00–10:00 and 18:00–21:00 — flights in these windows guaranteed EU261 compensation: Up to €600 for controllable cancellations and delays UK261 compensation: Up to £520 for UK-departing flights ENAC complaint portal: enac.gov.it → complaints
Rome Fiumicino is Italy’s largest airport and its primary international gateway — the hub through which ITA Airways, Europe’s flag carrier for Italy, operates the majority of its long-haul and European network. It handles approximately 43 million passengers annually and serves as the connection point between Italy’s domestic network and intercontinental routes to North America, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia.
The disruptions did not emerge from thin air. Inbound traffic from major European connection points — Amsterdam, London, Paris, and Frankfurt — arrived delayed, triggering a cascade of late departures at Fiumicino that spread through both domestic Italian routes and onward European services.
The mechanism is straightforward and familiar from the wider European crisis pattern: an aircraft that arrives 90 minutes late from Amsterdam cannot turn around in 45 minutes and depart on schedule. The crew’s rest and duty-hour calculation changes. The slot at the destination airport may be lost. The gate is occupied longer than planned, delaying the next arriving aircraft that needs it. Multiply this across 92 ITA Airways rotations in a single day and the 266-delay total becomes arithmetically predictable.
ITA Airways’ 92-delay figure is particularly significant because the carrier operates Italy’s sole long-haul and intercontinental network from Fiumicino. Unlike Ryanair or easyJet, which can route passengers around a disruption via alternative bases, ITA’s Fiumicino hub is central to every intercontinental connection it operates. A 92-delay day at ITA means every New York, São Paulo, Tokyo, Mumbai, and sub-Saharan Africa passenger who transits through Rome is affected — not just the Rome-departing domestic and European travellers.
ITA Airways’ 92 delays today represent the carrier’s most disrupted day at its home hub in the current June crisis period. The numbers establish the pattern clearly: ITA is not running a disruption caused by a single event or a single route failure. It is running a systemic network breakdown across its entire Fiumicino operation.
ITA’s Fiumicino network spans three tiers of routes that are all simultaneously delayed today:
Domestic Italian routes: Rome–Milan, Rome–Venice, Rome–Naples, Rome–Catania, Rome–Palermo, Rome–Bari, Rome–Bologna. These are the high-frequency shuttle services operating multiple times daily. When ITA’s first morning domestic departure is delayed, the aircraft cannot return to Fiumicino on schedule for its mid-morning rotation — and the chain breaks at every subsequent stop.
European routes: Rome–London, Rome–Paris, Rome–Amsterdam, Rome–Frankfurt, Rome–Zurich, Rome–Brussels, Rome–Madrid, Rome–Barcelona, Rome–Athens, Rome–Malta. These are the routes feeding Fiumicino’s role as a European hub — and these are precisely the routes confirmed disrupted by today’s cascades from Amsterdam, London, Paris, and Frankfurt inbound services.
Long-haul routes: Rome–New York JFK, Rome–Washington Dulles, Rome–São Paulo, Rome–Tokyo, Rome–Mumbai, Rome–Accra, Rome–Nairobi. ITA’s intercontinental network from Fiumicino is its highest-yield operation — and a 92-delay day at the hub risks the long-haul rotation cycle on which next week’s intercontinental services depend.
EU261 for ITA Airways passengers: ITA Airways is an Italian carrier subject to full EU261 rules. For controllable cancellations and delays of 3+ hours:
| Route distance | Compensation |
|---|---|
| Up to 1,500km | €250 per passenger |
| 1,500–3,500km | €400 per passenger |
| Over 3,500km (4hr+ delay) | €600 per passenger |
Contact: ita-airways.com → Manage Booking | ITA Customer service: +39 06 8596 8960
easyJet’s 21-delay figure at Fiumicino today is a preview of what Saturday June 13 brings — when the carrier’s own cabin crew and pilots across all of Italy walk out for 18 hours. The carrier’s existing network pressure at Rome today will amplify the June 13 disruption, as aircraft and crews that should be in position for Saturday’s reduced schedule are already running behind.
easyJet operates from Rome to London Gatwick, London Luton, Manchester, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Amsterdam, Berlin, Paris CDG, Barcelona, and a range of other European destinations. Its 21 Fiumicino delays today affect the UK-Italy and pan-European leisure corridors that represent its highest Italian market volumes.
Contact: easyjet.com → Manage Bookings | easyJet UK: 0330 365 5000
KLM’s 2 cancellations today are particularly impactful because each KLM Rome cancellation represents an Amsterdam-connecting passenger whose onwards journey — whether to North America, Asia, or another European city via Amsterdam Schiphol — is broken at its Italian feeder point.
KLM’s Rome–Amsterdam service feeds directly into the Schiphol hub’s North Atlantic and long-haul complex. A passenger booked on KLM Rome–Amsterdam–New York today who faces a KLM Rome cancellation is not simply delayed by the flight time — they are potentially stranded until tomorrow’s Amsterdam departure, missing their transatlantic connection entirely.
Contact: klm.com → My Trips | KLM: 0207 660 0293 (UK)
Wizz Air operates Rome to Central and Eastern European destinations — Budapest, Warsaw, Bucharest, Sofia, Prague, Vienna, and others. Today’s 7 delays affect primarily the Eastern European diaspora community in Rome and Italian tourists travelling to Central European destinations.
Contact: wizzair.com → My Bookings
Jet2 operates Rome as a UK package holiday gateway — its Fiumicino services connect to UK regional airports including Manchester, Leeds Bradford, Birmingham, Edinburgh, and East Midlands. Today’s 5 Jet2 delays affect UK package holidaymakers at the start or end of their Rome stays.
Contact: jet2.com → Manage My Booking
British Airways’ London Heathrow–Rome Fiumicino service is among its most commercially important European short-haul routes. Today’s 5 BA delays at Fiumicino affect the Heathrow–Rome corridor and create connection risk for passengers continuing beyond Rome on ITA Airways domestic services.
For UK passengers: UK261 applies to BA’s London-departing services. Controllable delays of 3+ hours on the Heathrow–Rome route (approximately 2,200km): £350 per passenger.
Contact: ba.com → Manage My Booking | BA: 0800 727 800 (UK)
All four carriers confirm delays in the 2–10 range today at Fiumicino — reflecting the network cascade from their respective hubs (Paris CDG, Frankfurt, Atlanta/New York, and Delhi/Mumbai) arriving late into Rome and disrupting return departures.
For Delta passengers: Delta’s Rome operation feeds its transatlantic JFK–Rome and Atlanta–Rome services. A delayed Rome departure today risks the overnight transatlantic rotation, affecting tomorrow’s US-bound passengers.
Today’s 270 Rome disruptions are a Day 70 background crisis. Saturday June 13 is a qualitatively different event — four separate industrial actions confirmed to begin simultaneously, affecting different airports, different worker categories, and different carriers.
Pilots and flight attendants at easyJet will hold a nationwide 18-hour strike in Italy on June 13, 2026, from 06:00 to 24:00. This is a national action affecting all easyJet routes to and from Italy.
This is the most impactful June 13 action for UK travellers because easyJet is the dominant carrier between the UK and Italy. Every easyJet flight from Gatwick, Luton, Bristol, Manchester, Edinburgh, or Glasgow to Rome, Milan, Venice, Naples, or Bologna on June 13 is at risk of cancellation or severe disruption.
Anyone on easyJet or transiting through Verona should check their flight status carefully.
easyJet has issued — or will imminently issue — a travel advisory for June 13 Italian bookings, allowing free date changes. Check easyjet.com → Manage Bookings from today for any active advisory on your specific Italian booking.
ENAV staff at Verona Airport, Italy’s air traffic control, will stage an 18-hour walkout on June 13, 2026, from 06:00 to 24:00. Called by OSL UILT-UIL and FAST-CONFSAL-AV.
Verona Villafranca Airport serves the Veneto region — the gateway for visitors to Verona, Lake Garda, and the Dolomites — and handles a significant volume of German and Austrian holidaymakers as well as UK and Irish charter operations.
Italian law requires protected service windows during strikes. Flights operating between 07:00 and 10:00, and again between 18:00 and 21:00, are guaranteed. Outside those windows, disruption is likely, particularly to short-haul and domestic routes.
Practical implication for Verona bookings on June 13: If your flight is booked in the 07:00–10:00 or 18:00–21:00 windows, it is protected and should operate. If your flight is outside those windows — treat it as significantly at risk and contact your carrier today to understand your options.
Staff of SOGAER, Sogaerdyn and SOGAER Security at Cagliari-Elmas Airport will strike on Saturday June 13, 2026, from 06:00 to 24:00. The action may disrupt ground handling, check-in, baggage, and security screening for the entire day.
Cagliari is Sardinia’s primary airport and the gateway for summer holidaymakers from the UK, Germany, Italy’s mainland cities, and Scandinavia. An all-staff walkout from 06:00 to midnight means virtually every airport function is affected — check-in, baggage handling, security screening, and ground handling.
Cagliari-Elmas Airport’s closure covers almost all of the southern Sardinian airport’s operations, from security to ground handling.
For passengers booked on Cagliari flights on June 13: the protected time windows (07:00–10:00 and 18:00–21:00) offer some protection, but an all-staff ground strike is more operationally disruptive than an ATC strike alone — even a protected-window flight may face delays at check-in or baggage processing.
USB Lavoro Privato has filed a 4-hour strike for Sky Service personnel operating at Milan Linate on June 13, 2026, from 12:00 to 16:00.
Milan Linate is the city-centre airport handling primarily domestic Italian routes and some European short-haul services. A 4-hour afternoon window affects the midday and early-afternoon rotation at Linate — typically the highest-frequency domestic departure period of the day.
June 13 is significant — but it is not the end of Italy’s summer disruption pattern. Here is everything confirmed:
| Date | Strike | Scope | Worst airports |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 13 | easyJet Italy cabin crew + pilots | National 06:00–24:00 | All Italy easyJet bases |
| June 13 | ENAV Verona ATC | 06:00–24:00 (protected windows apply) | VRN |
| June 13 | SOGAER Cagliari-Elmas all staff | 06:00–24:00 | CAG |
| June 13 | Sky Service Milan Linate | 12:00–16:00 | LIN |
| June 19–20 | Italy General Strike | 21:00 June 19→21:00 June 20 | All rail + bus + metro |
| June 26 | Nationwide 24hr ground handling | Midnight–midnight — NO minimum service | FCO, MXP, NAP, VCE, BLQ — all |
| July 5 | CUB Trasporti national aviation + FCO/CIA security 10:00–18:00 | Two overlapping actions | FCO, CIA |
June 26 is the most significant date on the Italian calendar this summer. A full 24-hour nationwide ground handling strike covers every Italian airport, with no minimum service protection in place. Rome Fiumicino, Milan Malpensa, Venice, Naples, and every other major hub is included. If you are flying to, from or through Italy on June 26, the risk of cancellation or serious delay is high, and the protected windows that apply on June 13 do not apply here.
Italy’s multiple-layer strikes create a specific legal complexity: different actions trigger different EU261 rights.
| Cause | Cash compensation | Refund | Duty of care |
|---|---|---|---|
| Airline own staff strike (easyJet June 13) | ✅ YES — controllable | ✅ YES | ✅ YES |
| ATC strike (ENAV Verona June 13) | ❌ NO — extraordinary | ✅ YES | ✅ YES |
| Ground handling strike (Cagliari, Linate June 13) | ✅ YES — third-party contract, controllable | ✅ YES | ✅ YES |
| Post-strike knock-on (June 14+) | ✅ YES — positioning failure | ✅ YES | ✅ YES |
The easyJet June 13 cabin crew strike is a critical distinction: When an airline’s own employees strike against that airline directly, the action is classified as controllable — and EU261 cash compensation applies. This is different from the ENAV Verona ATC strike, where ATC is a government agency and the action is extraordinary. For passengers disrupted by easyJet’s own crew strike on June 13: cash compensation of €250–€600 per passenger applies.
| Route distance | Compensation |
|---|---|
| Up to 1,500km | €250 per passenger |
| 1,500–3,500km | €400 per passenger |
| Over 3,500km | €600 per passenger |
| Route distance | Compensation |
|---|---|
| Up to 1,500km | £220 per passenger |
| 1,500–3,500km | £350 per passenger |
| Over 3,500km | £520 per passenger |
Every cancelled EU-airport flight entitles you to a full cash refund within 7 business days regardless of cause. Airlines cannot substitute vouchers without your consent.
For all cancellations and delays of 2+ hours regardless of cause:
Keep all receipts. Airlines must reimburse reasonable costs even when they cannot arrange accommodation directly.
Italy: File with your airline first. If unresolved in 6 weeks: escalate to ENAC (Ente Nazionale per l’Aviazione Civile) at enac.gov.it → complaints. UK: CAA at caa.co.uk/passengers or AviationADR at aviationadr.org.uk All: AirHelp (airhelp.com) — no-win-no-fee assisted claims for EU and UK disruptions
Time limits: 2 years (UK) / 2 years (Italy) from disruption date.
For June 9 disruptions at Fiumicino today: Your refund window is 2 years. File with your airline this week while documentation is fresh. Keep your boarding pass, cancellation notification screenshot, and any meal or hotel receipts.
For easyJet Italy bookings on June 13: Check easyjet.com → Manage Bookings for any active travel advisory. easyJet typically issues waivers allowing free date changes 7–10 days before a confirmed crew strike. If no advisory is live yet, check again tomorrow. If your booking has flexibility — move it to June 12 or June 14 now while seats are available.
For Verona bookings on June 13: Book flights in the 07:00–10:00 or 18:00–21:00 protected windows if possible. If your booking is outside those windows — contact your carrier to request a voluntary move to a protected window service.
For Cagliari bookings on June 13: Arrive 30 minutes earlier than usual even if your flight is in a protected time window — the all-staff ground strike means check-in and baggage processing will be slower regardless of whether your flight itself is guaranteed.
For any Italy booking June 26: Do not book tight connections through Italian airports on June 26. The nationwide ground handling strike with no minimum service protection means the risk of cancellation or 3+ hour delay is high across every Italian airport. Build in a 24-hour buffer if your Italy booking is near that date.
| Carrier / Airport | Website | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| ITA Airways | ita-airways.com → Manage Booking | +39 06 8596 8960 |
| easyJet | easyjet.com → Manage Bookings | 0330 365 5000 (UK) |
| Ryanair | ryanair.com → My Trips | Via app chat |
| KLM | klm.com → My Trips | 0207 660 0293 (UK) |
| British Airways | ba.com → Manage My Booking | 0800 727 800 (UK) |
| Wizz Air | wizzair.com → My Bookings | Via app chat |
| Jet2 | jet2.com → Manage My Booking | 0800 408 5591 |
| Lufthansa | lufthansa.com → My Bookings | 0371 945 9747 (UK) |
| Air France | airfrance.com → Manage | 0207 660 0337 (UK) |
| Fiumicino live status | adr.it/fiumicino | FCO flight info |
| AirHelp (EU261 claims) | airhelp.com | No-win-no-fee |
| ENAC Italy complaints | enac.gov.it | Online complaint portal |
| UK CAA | caa.co.uk/passengers | Complaint portal |
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