Paris CDG Strike LIVE — June 18, 2026: Baggage Chaos, Slow Turnarounds & Missed Connections Unfolding NOW at CDG, Orly & Le Bourget — Air France, EasyJet, Delta, BA, Ryanair, Emirates, United, Lufthansa, Qatar All Affected — Terminal-by-Terminal Status — What to Do RIGHT NOW If You Are at the Airport — EU261 + UK261 Rights — June 19 Recovery Outlook for UK, US, Canadian & Australian Travellers

Published on : 18 Jun 2026

Paris CDG Strike LIVE — June 18, 2026: Baggage Chaos, Slow Turnarounds & Missed Connections Unfolding NOW at CDG, Orly & Le Bourget — Air France, EasyJet, Delta, BA, Ryanair, Emirates, United, Lufthansa, Qatar All Affected — Terminal-by-Terminal Status — What to Do RIGHT NOW If You Are at the Airport — EU261 + UK261 Rights — June 19 Recovery Outlook for UK, US, Canadian & Australian Travellers

Published: June 18, 2026 — Thursday (🔴 LIVE STRIKE DAY · European Aviation Crisis Day 79)
Strike status: 🔴 ACTIVE — 00:01 to 23:59 Paris local time (CEST, UTC+2)
Airports affected: Paris Charles de Gaulle (CDG) · Paris Orly (ORY) · Paris Le Bourget (LBG)
Strike type: Ground staff walkout — baggage handlers · ramp agents · check-in staff · security badge workers · cleaning crews · ground transport personnel
NOT striking: Air traffic controllers · Pilots · Cabin crew — runways remain open
Union coalition: CGT · CFDT · Unsa · Sud Aérien — no suspension, no retraction filed
Dispute: Security badge rules — new prefect tightened criteria since summer 2024, threatening workers’ airport access
10:00 AM demonstration: Terminal 1 CDG — union rally confirming participation levels
Primary disruption type: Slower baggage delivery · longer turnaround times · extended check-in queues · missed onward connections — NOT wholesale flight cancellations
Historical precedent (comparable strikes): Up to 40% capacity cuts at CDG and Orly · 45-minute average delay increase · knock-on cancellations in Nice, Marseille, Lyon, Toulouse (30–50% capacity cut)
Groupe ADP position: No formal capacity reduction order issued as of this morning — airlines managing individually
Worst risk window: Morning peak (06:00–11:00 CEST) and evening peak (17:00–22:00 CEST) — worst queues concentrate here
Most exposed airlines: Air France · easyJet · Ryanair · Delta · British Airways · Emirates · Lufthansa · Qatar Airways · United Airlines · Air Canada · KLM
Most exposed routes: London Heathrow · New York JFK · Dubai · Montreal · Toronto · Atlanta · Washington · Chicago · Amsterdam · Frankfurt
EES border queues today: Still active — 2–4 hours for non-EU first-time registrants — compounds strike disruption
EU261 compensation: ❌ Unlikely for this strike (airport staff = extraordinary circumstance) — but refund + rebooking + duty of care ✅ unconditional
UK261: Same framework — refund + rebooking + duty of care ✅
Free EU261 check: airhelp.com · claimcompass.eu
CDG live flight board: parisaeroport.fr → Charles de Gaulle → Departures/Arrivals
Orly live flight board: parisaeroport.fr → Orly → Departures/Arrivals


The strike is live. As you read this, baggage handlers at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport have been walking off their posts since midnight. Ramp agents at Orly are not loading aircraft at their normal pace. Check-in desks are operating with reduced staff. The CGT, CFDT, Unsa and Sud Aérien coalition has confirmed full participation with a demonstration under way at Terminal 1. Air traffic controllers are not involved — runways are open and the skies above Paris are clear. But the ground operation that enables every aircraft to load its passengers, fuel up, receive its baggage, push back from the gate and depart on time is running in slow motion. If you are at CDG or Orly right now, or travelling to Paris today, this is your live guide to what is happening, what you should do in the next 30 minutes, and exactly what EU and UK law entitles you to — regardless of what any airline employee may tell you at the counter.


PART 1 — LIVE STRIKE STATUS: WHAT IS HAPPENING RIGHT NOW

CDG — The Epicentre

Paris Charles de Gaulle is today’s primary disruption point. CDG is the largest airport in the strike zone — handling the bulk of long-haul Air France traffic, the entire SkyTeam alliance’s major European connections, and the highest concentration of striking ground staff.

The demonstration called for 10:00 AM at the CDG Terminal 1 airport prefecture building is under way. Union participation levels will determine the severity of today’s disruption — and early reports indicate strong turnout from CGT-affiliated baggage handlers and ramp agents, the two worker categories that most directly affect flight operations.

The impact is expected to be greater at Roissy–Charles de Gaulle Airport, where the strike action originated, with possible disruptions at Orly Airport and occasional effects at Le Bourget Airport.

What CDG passengers are experiencing right now:

  • Baggage check-in desks: Reduced staffing — longer queues at bag drop, especially in the morning peak at Terminal 2 (Air France), Terminal 3 (easyJet, Ryanair) and Terminal 1 (Star Alliance — United, Lufthansa, Swiss, Singapore)
  • Ramp operations: Slower aircraft loading and pushback — turnaround times that normally take 45 minutes are taking 75–90 minutes
  • Aircraft departure delays: Cascade building through the morning — early morning departures starting 15–30 minutes late will become 60–90 minute delays by midday as the turnaround debt accumulates
  • Baggage delivery on arrival: Delays of 45–90 minutes for checked bags on inbound flights — passengers collecting checked luggage should allow significant extra time
  • CDG-VAL inter-terminal shuttle: Operating normally — but stations are congested as passengers divert from disrupted check-in areas

Paris Orly (ORY) — Domestic and Short-Haul Hit

At Orly, which handles a large share of domestic French flights and short-haul European routes, passengers could face crowded terminals and extended processing times, particularly in the early morning peak and late afternoon.

Orly is Transavia France’s primary hub and handles the bulk of Air France’s domestic and North African network. Today’s strike hits Orly’s ground handling capacity for the morning bank of Transavia departures to Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria — routes that are already running maximum summer frequency. Orly’s terminal layout — compact compared to CDG’s sprawling 32-square-kilometre campus — means queues build faster and clear more slowly.

Le Bourget (LBG) — Business Aviation Affected

The impact at Le Bourget is expected to be occasional — business aviation and private flights are the primary affected operations. Le Bourget handles no commercial airline scheduled services — its disruption today affects private jets, charter operators, and general aviation users.


PART 2 — TERMINAL-BY-TERMINAL: CDG RIGHT NOW

CDG’s four main passenger terminals are experiencing different disruption levels today:

Terminal 2 — Air France / SkyTeam — HIGHEST RISK

Terminal 2 is today’s most critical disruption zone. Air France’s long-haul operations from Terminal 2E and 2F — New York JFK, Los Angeles, Montreal, Toronto, Chicago, Washington, Miami, Dubai, Tokyo, São Paulo, Johannesburg, Nairobi — are all at elevated delay risk as Air France’s ground handling contractors (Swissport and Airport Handling) face strike participation.

Current Terminal 2 status:

  • Morning long-haul departure bank (07:00–11:00): Running 30–60 minutes late and extending
  • CDG-VAL shuttle to Terminal 2 from other terminals: Congested — allow 45 minutes
  • Baggage delivery for inbound aircraft: 60–90 minute delays reported
  • Air France app: Check every 30 minutes for gate and departure time updates

Delta Air Lines (T2D — SkyTeam): Delta’s transatlantic services from CDG to Atlanta, New York JFK, Boston and Los Angeles are all in Terminal 2D. Delta passengers today face the same ground handling pressure as Air France. Check delta.com → My Trips for live status.

KLM Royal Dutch Airlines (T2D): KLM’s Amsterdam Schiphol connections through CDG are in T2D. KLM passengers connecting from transatlantic flights through CDG to Amsterdam today face the highest missed-connection risk — the turnaround delays at CDG break the tight CDG–AMS connection windows.

Terminal 1 — Star Alliance — MEDIUM-HIGH RISK

Terminal 1 houses United Airlines, Lufthansa, Swiss, Singapore Airlines, Air Canada, ANA, Turkish Airlines and all Star Alliance carriers. United’s EWR–CDG and IAD–CDG services arrive here and must turn around for their return departures.

Current Terminal 1 status:

  • Lufthansa European connections: Running 30–45 minutes late
  • United Airlines arrivals: Delays on inbound from Newark — turnaround for return flights compressed
  • Singapore Airlines: Long-haul arrivals on time — ground disruption affects baggage delivery (60–90 min)
  • Air Canada: YYZ–CDG and YUL–CDG service disrupted — check aircanada.com → My Bookings

Terminal 2A/2C — Oneworld — MEDIUM RISK

Terminal 2A/2C handles British Airways (LHR–CDG short-haul and connections), American Airlines (PHL–CDG, JFK–CDG), Iberia, Finnair, and Cathay Pacific. BA’s Heathrow–CDG shuttle — primarily carrying connecting passengers — faces turnaround delays at the Paris end.

British Airways today: BA’s Heathrow–CDG passengers are transit passengers — those connecting through CDG to long-haul Air France or oneworld services face a higher missed-connection risk today. If your BA itinerary connects at CDG to a long-haul flight, contact ba.com → Manage My Booking NOW and check for a direct alternative routing that bypasses CDG.

Terminal 3 — Low-Cost — MEDIUM RISK

Terminal 3 handles easyJet and Ryanair CDG operations. EasyJet’s CDG-based routes (London Gatwick, Amsterdam, Geneva, Berlin, Lisbon) are at elevated delay risk. Ryanair’s CDG operation is smaller — primarily Paris–Dublin and selected European routes.

EasyJet at Terminal 3: EasyJet is recording elevated delays today at CDG. The turnaround pressure is directly impacting easyJet’s tight one-hour turnaround windows — a 30-minute ramp delay at CDG on the inbound creates a 60-minute departure delay on the outbound. Check easyjet.com → Manage Bookings for your specific flight status.


PART 3 — THE FIVE DISRUPTION TYPES HAPPENING RIGHT NOW

Disruption Type 1 — Slow Turnarounds: The Primary Problem

Longer turnaround times, slower baggage off-loading, and extended security queues can quickly spread through the day, and passengers connecting through CDG may face a higher risk of missing onward flights.

A normal CDG turnaround for a medium-haul aircraft takes 45–55 minutes. With reduced ramp agents today, the same process takes 75–90 minutes. On a day when CDG operates 600+ departures, a 30-minute average turnaround extension means 300 additional hours of combined delay injected into the schedule — before any single weather event or ATC restriction.

Disruption Type 2 — Baggage Delivery Delays

Checked baggage is the most visible manifestation of today’s strike for arriving passengers. With baggage handlers reduced to skeleton staff or strike-rate staffing, hold baggage that normally arrives at the carousel within 20–30 minutes of landing is taking 60–90 minutes. If you are arriving at CDG today and have checked luggage:

  • Do not leave the baggage hall — your bags are coming, they are just late
  • If your bags have not arrived within 90 minutes of landing, go to the baggage services desk immediately and file a Property Irregularity Report (PIR) before exiting the terminal
  • If you are missing a connection: go directly to the airline transfer desk before your bags arrive — the airline can rebook you while the bags follow on a later flight

Disruption Type 3 — Check-In Queue Build-Up

Passengers who did NOT complete online check-in before arriving at CDG are today experiencing queues of 60–120 minutes at check-in desks. If you are at the airport now and have not checked in:

  • Go directly to the self-service check-in kiosk if your airline has them (Air France, easyJet, Delta, United, Lufthansa all do)
  • If using a kiosk: proceed to bag drop, not the full check-in desk
  • If you cannot check in digitally: join the queue immediately — do not wait at the gate first

Disruption Type 4 — Missed Connections

CDG’s connecting hub function — where passengers arrive from one continent and connect to another — is today’s highest-risk scenario. If you only transit airside and do not collect bags, your main exposure is a delayed inbound or outbound flight. But passengers collecting bags and re-checking face today’s full disruption chain.

If your connection at CDG is under 2.5 hours today: Go immediately to the airline transfer desk when you land — do not wait at baggage claim if you have a tight connection. Explain your onward booking. The airline must rebook you on the next available connection at no charge if the missed connection was caused by a delay on the inbound flight.

If you missed a connection already: The airline at CDG is legally obligated to rebook you to your final destination on the next available service. You are also entitled to meals, hotel accommodation and transport if an overnight is required.

Disruption Type 5 — Knock-On Regional Cancellations

Historical precedent from comparable Paris ground strikes shows that Nice, Marseille, Lyon and Toulouse see capacity cuts of 30–50% on the day. Previous strike days this spring saw capacity cuts of up to 40% at CDG and Orly, with Nice, Marseille, Lyon, and Toulouse told to cancel 30–50% of flights.

If you are flying from a French regional airport today — not just Paris — check your flight status immediately. Air France Hop! regional services from provincial airports that connect into CDG are under today’s cascade pressure.


PART 4 — YOUR RIGHTS RIGHT NOW: EU261 + UK261

The Critical Distinction for Today

Because this is an airport-staff strike rather than airline industrial action, compensation under EC 261 is unlikely in most cases, but airlines should still provide rerouting or refunds if flights are cancelled, and care during longer delays.

This is the most important sentence in this article for passengers. The legal framework works as follows:

Today’s disruption = airport ground staff strike = extraordinary circumstance for airlines

This means:

  • ✅ Full refund if your flight is cancelled — unconditional, within 7 days
  • ✅ Rebooking on next available service at no extra cost
  • ✅ Duty of care — meals, hotel, transport — from the moment of cancellation
  • ❌ Cash compensation (€250–€600) — NOT payable for this type of strike in most cases

The exception: Ground handling strikes and certain types of industrial action do not automatically qualify as extraordinary circumstances under EU261, and the compensation question is genuinely worth testing before it is accepted as final. If your airline cited “extraordinary circumstances” and refused compensation, file the EU261 claim anyway. Airlines routinely reject claims that courts later overturn. AirAdvisor CEO Anton Radchenko has stated that passengers “often accept that answer without question” when they should challenge it.

What to Do Right Now at the Airport

If your flight is delayed (not cancelled):

  1. Request meal vouchers immediately — airline must provide them from a 2-hour delay
  2. Take screenshots of all delay notifications with timestamps
  3. Request a written delay reason code from the gate agent
  4. Keep all receipts for food and drink purchased while waiting

If your flight is cancelled:

  1. Do NOT leave the terminal without completing the following:
  2. Go to the airline desk — state: “My flight has been cancelled. I am requesting either a full cash refund OR rebooking to my final destination under EU Regulation 261/2004.”
  3. Request meal vouchers AND hotel voucher if overnight required
  4. If the desk queue is over 30 minutes — use the airline app to initiate the refund or rebooking while you queue

If you missed a connection:

  1. Go directly to the airline’s transfer desk — not the departure gate
  2. The airline must rebook you to your final destination at no charge
  3. If the next available flight is tomorrow — the airline must provide hotel and transport tonight

Refund Rights — All Passengers Regardless of Cause

You are unconditionally entitled to a full cash refund to your original payment method within 7 business days for any cancelled flight today. The airline cannot force you to accept a voucher or travel credit.

If anyone at the airport tells you that strike-caused cancellations do not qualify for a refund — they are wrong. The EU261 refund right applies to all cancellations without exception. Compensation (the separate €250–€600 payment) is the element that extraordinary circumstances may exclude — not the refund.


PART 5 — AIRLINE-BY-AIRLINE STATUS AND CONTACTS

Air France

Air France is today’s most impacted carrier by volume — as the primary CDG operator, its ground handling contractor is most directly affected by the strike. Air France’s transatlantic morning departure bank (07:00–11:00) is running with extended turnarounds. Check airfrance.com → My Bookings for live status.

Air France EU261 duty of care: Air France must provide meal vouchers for delays over 2 hours. Request them at any Air France desk in Terminal 2. If cancelled: airfrance.com → Refund Request.

Air France contact: 0800 587 1070 (UK freephone) · airfrance.com → Live Chat

EasyJet

EasyJet is recording elevated delays at CDG Terminal 3 today. EasyJet’s CDG turnaround slots are being extended by ground operation delays. Check easyjet.com → Manage Bookings or the easyJet app (faster than the website today).

EasyJet EU261 claim: easyjet.com → Help → EU261 Claim. Note: as airport staff strike, cash compensation is unlikely but refund and duty of care are unconditional.

EasyJet contact: Via app or website — phone lines will be overloaded today.

Delta Air Lines

Delta’s CDG operations at Terminal 2D are exposed to Air France’s same ground handling contractors. Delta’s ATL–CDG, JFK–CDG and BOS–CDG transatlantic arrivals this morning are experiencing baggage delivery delays of 60–90 minutes.

Delta EU261/DOT rights: delta.com → Refunds. For transatlantic passengers: both EU261 (departing CDG) and DOT rules apply.

Delta contact: 0207 660 0767 (UK) · delta.com → Live Chat

British Airways

BA’s LHR–CDG shuttle is running today — but passengers connecting through CDG for onward Air France services face turnaround-driven missed connections. BA’s own Heathrow-based long-haul programme is unaffected by the CDG strike.

BA UK261 claim: ba.com → Customer Support → Make a Claim.

BA contact: 0800 727 800 (UK freephone)

Emirates

Emirates’ CDG operations — serving the Dubai–Paris–onward connection for Australian, Middle Eastern and South Asian passengers — are experiencing ground handling delays today. Emirates does not operate its own ground handling at CDG — it is exposed to third-party contractors.

Emirates contact: 0344 800 2777 (UK)

Ryanair

Ryanair’s CDG operation is in Terminal 3. Ryanair’s CDG routes (Dublin, selected European cities) are at elevated delay risk. Check ryanair.com → My Bookings or the Ryanair app.

Ryanair EU261 claim: ryanair.com → Help → Submit a Claim.

United Airlines

United’s EWR–CDG and IAD–CDG services are in Terminal 1. United passengers face today’s T1 ground handling pressure on both arrival baggage and departure turnarounds.

United contact: 0800 888 555 (UK freephone) · united.com → My Trips

Lufthansa

Lufthansa’s CDG operation in Terminal 1 is at moderate delay risk. Lufthansa’s Frankfurt connections through CDG are the highest-risk Lufthansa itinerary today.

Lufthansa contact: 0371 945 9747 (UK)

Qatar Airways

Qatar’s CDG operations — connecting Paris to Doha and onward to Australia, Asia and the Middle East — are at elevated delay risk due to ground handling pressure at Terminal 1.

Qatar contact: 0330 912 7415 (UK)


PART 6 — THE JUNE 19 RECOVERY OUTLOOK

Even travelers not flying on June 18 may experience residual delays on June 19 if aircraft and crews are out of position.

The June 19 recovery question depends entirely on today’s strike participation rate. Three scenarios:

Scenario A — Low participation (under 25% strike rate): Minimal disruption today. CDG runs near-normally. June 19 is completely clean. Probability: 25%.

Scenario B — Moderate participation (25–50% strike rate): Significant delays, some cancellations, major baggage disruption. June 19 runs with 1–2 hour recovery delays in the morning as aircraft return to position. Probability: 50%.

Scenario C — High participation (50%+ strike rate): Major capacity cuts at CDG and Orly. Hundreds of delays, dozens of cancellations. June 19 faces a full recovery day with residual cascade disruption, particularly for Air France transatlantic programme. Probability: 25%.

For June 19 travellers: If you are flying through CDG tomorrow, the safest action is to check parisaeroport.fr and your airline’s app tonight at 20:00 for any recovery advisories. If today’s disruption is severe (Scenario C), some airlines may issue free date-change waivers extending through June 20.

The strike notice covers only June 18. No extension to June 19 has been filed. The dispute is narrow (security badge rules, not pay) — management may make an overnight concession that ends the dispute before June 19 operations begin. Watch for a union statement tonight.


PART 7 — IF YOU ARE STILL AT HOME HEADING TO CDG TODAY

If you have not yet left for the airport and your flight is today, run through this checklist in the next 10 minutes:

  1. Check your flight status NOW — parisaeroport.fr or your airline’s app. If cancelled, call the airline before going to the airport.
  2. Complete online check-in immediately — if not already done. This bypasses the check-in desk queue entirely.
  3. Travel carry-on only if possible — eliminates the baggage handling risk entirely.
  4. Allow 4 hours before departure for long-haul CDG departures. 3.5 hours for short-haul.
  5. Know your terminal before you arrive — CDG’s 32km campus means arriving at the wrong terminal costs 30–45 minutes via the CDG-VAL shuttle.
  6. RER B (CDG rail link from Paris): Running today — no RER B strike. But trains are more crowded than normal as diverted passengers use rail instead of original ground transport.
  7. Flat-rate taxis: Paris operates fixed flat-rate taxis to CDG (€56 from right bank, €65 from left bank). Traffic is moderate today — allow 90 minutes from central Paris to CDG.

Live Status Checkers — Use These Right Now

Airport / Airline Live status link
CDG real-time departures parisaeroport.fr → Charles de Gaulle → Departures
Orly real-time departures parisaeroport.fr → Orly → Departures
Air France flight status airfrance.com → Flight Status
EasyJet flight status easyjet.com → Manage Bookings
Delta flight status delta.com → Flight Status
British Airways ba.com → Manage My Booking
Ryanair ryanair.com → My Bookings
United Airlines united.com → My Trips → Flight Status
Lufthansa lufthansa.com → Flight Status
Emirates emirates.com → Manage Booking
AirHelp EU261 free check airhelp.com

Airline Contacts — Quick Reference for June 18

Airline Phone (UK) App/Portal
Air France 0800 587 1070 airfrance.com → My Bookings
British Airways 0800 727 800 ba.com → Manage My Booking
EasyJet Via app only today easyjet.com → Manage Bookings
Ryanair Via app only today ryanair.com → My Bookings
Delta Air Lines 0207 660 0767 delta.com → My Trips
United Airlines 0800 888 555 united.com → My Trips
Lufthansa 0371 945 9747 lufthansa.com → Manage
Emirates 0344 800 2777 emirates.com → Manage
Qatar Airways 0330 912 7415 qatarairways.com → Manage
Air Canada 1-888-247-2262 aircanada.com → My Bookings
KLM 0207 660 0293 klm.com → My Trip

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.

Lastest News

How to reach

2nd Floor, 39, Above Kirti Club, DLF Industrial Area, Kirti Nagar, New Delhi, Delhi 110015

Payment Methods

card

Connect With Us

Travel Tourister is a leading Travel portal where we introduce travellers to trusted travel agents to make their journey hasselfree, memorable And happy. Travel Tourister is a platform where travellers get Tour packages ,Hotel packages deals through trusted travel companies And hoteliers who are working with us across the world. We always try to find new and more travel agents and hoteliers from every nook and corners across the world so that you could compare the deals with different travel agents and hoteliers and book your tour or hotel with the one you have chosen according to your taste and budget.

Your Tour Package Requirement

Copyright © Travel Tourister, India. All Rights Reserved

Travel Tourister Rated 4.6 / 5 based on 22924 reviews.