Published on : 09 Mar 2026
Published: March 9, 2026 — 72 hours before strike Strike Date: Tuesday, March 12, 2026 — 24 hours Brussels Airport (BRU): ✅ ALL departing flights CONFIRMED cancelled — official airport confirmation Charleroi Airport (CRL): ❌ FULLY CLOSED — zero departures AND arrivals — NOT “disrupted,” CLOSED Correction to Previous Coverage: Charleroi was listed as “also severely disrupted” in earlier articles. That is now wrong. Charleroi has confirmed complete closure — no arrivals, no departures, no exceptions Airlines with FREE REBOOK WINDOWS OPEN NOW:
Stop. Read this before you do anything else. Three previous articles on this site have covered the Brussels March 12 strike. Every one of them listed Charleroi Airport as a potential “severely disrupted” alternative. That advice is now wrong, and if you acted on it — if you reboooked onto a Ryanair, Wizz Air, or easyJet flight from Charleroi on March 12 as your escape plan — you need to know immediately: Charleroi Airport will not be able to carry out scheduled departures and arrivals on March 12. Not fewer flights. Not delayed flights. No flights will be able to depart or arrive. The only airports that will operate normally on March 12 are outside Belgium entirely. This article tells you what changed, what is open right now, and what you need to do in the next 72 hours.
Every article published on this site before today — and the majority of coverage across all travel media — described Charleroi Airport as “also severely disrupted” or “also affected.” That language came from the original union strike notice, which confirmed Charleroi would be hit but did not specify the extent.
On March 5, Charleroi Airport published its own official statement. The language is unambiguous: “Due to the national demonstration planned on Thursday 12 March and the lack of staff to ensure safe operations, Charleroi Airport will not be able to carry out scheduled departures and arrivals.”
Departures AND arrivals. Not some flights. All flights. This is a complete airport closure — operationally identical to Brussels Airport, not a “disrupted” secondary option.
Both departures and arrivals will cease for at least 24 hours, forcing Ryanair, Wizz Air and other low-cost carriers to re-book or refund thousands of travellers.
What this means for you:
If you booked a replacement flight from Charleroi (CRL) after reading any previous coverage that described it as an alternative — that flight will not operate on March 12. You need to rebook again. Airlines have until March 10 to notify customers of new options. If you have not been contacted yet, contact your airline today — do not wait for their notification.
The only safe airports for March 12 are outside Belgium entirely.
| Airport | Country | Status | Distance from Brussels |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brussels Airport (BRU) | Belgium | ❌ ALL departures CANCELLED | — |
| Brussels South Charleroi (CRL) | Belgium | ❌ FULLY CLOSED — zero departures AND arrivals | 60km south |
| Liège Airport (LGG) | Belgium | ⚠️ Likely disrupted — same strike unions | 95km east |
| Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS) | Netherlands | ✅ FULLY OPERATIONAL | 210km north, ~2h drive |
| Paris CDG | France | ✅ FULLY OPERATIONAL | 290km south, ~3h drive |
| Frankfurt (FRA) | Germany | ✅ FULLY OPERATIONAL | 340km east, ~3h30m drive |
| Düsseldorf (DUS) | Germany | ✅ FULLY OPERATIONAL | 220km east, ~2h drive |
| Cologne/Bonn (CGN) | Germany | ✅ FULLY OPERATIONAL | 230km east, ~2h15m drive |
| London Heathrow (LHR) | UK (Eurostar) | ✅ FULLY OPERATIONAL | ~2h15m via Eurostar from Brussels Midi |
Critical note on Eurostar: The Eurostar London–Brussels service may experience cancellations on March 12 due to Belgian railway workers participating in the same national strike action. Rail links and local public transport in Brussels are also expected to suffer severe disruptions. If your plan involves taking Eurostar to London and flying from there — confirm Eurostar is operating before the day. Check eurostar.com for March 12 departure status from March 10 onward.
Brussels Airlines — Free Rebook Until March 31 Brussels Airlines has opened its free rebooking window for all passengers with March 12 BRU departures. The rebooking must be made before the originally planned travel date and within 12 months from the purchase date of your original ticket.
Key terms:
🌐 brusselsairlines.com → My Bookings → Rebook 📞 Brussels Airlines: +32-2-723-2323
TUI Fly — Free Rebook or Full Refund Brussels Airlines and TUI Fly have already opened free rebooking windows. TUI Fly operates charter and leisure flights from Brussels and Charleroi. All March 12 departures from both airports are affected.
Key terms:
Air Canada — Free Rebook (Confirmed Since February 27) The most comprehensive waiver of any carrier — confirmed for three weeks. Key terms (unchanged):
Cathay Pacific — Free Rebook Until March 31 Cathay Pacific became the first non-EU carrier to publish a special ticketing guideline on February 24, waiving rebooking and re-routing fees for all tickets issued on or before that date for travel to or from Brussels on March 12. Customers may change their flight dates free of charge until March 31, 2026, provided the same booking class is available; fare differences still apply if a higher class is chosen. Refund penalties remain in place, and no-show passengers are excluded from the waiver.
🌐 cathaypacific.com → Manage Booking
United Airlines — Rerouting via Amsterdam and Paris Confirmed Emirates and United are giving customers the choice of rerouting via Amsterdam or Paris. This is the most practically useful waiver for transatlantic passengers — United’s Newark (EWR) and Washington (IAD) routes from Brussels are the most affected.
Key terms for United BRU passengers:
Emirates — Rerouting via Amsterdam and Paris Confirmed Emirates and United are giving customers the choice of rerouting via Amsterdam or Paris. Emirates’ BRU→DXB route is one of Brussels’ highest-capacity long-haul services.
Key terms for Emirates BRU passengers:
Ryanair (CRL passengers primarily) Ryanair is the largest operator at Charleroi. Both departures and arrivals will cease at CRL, forcing Ryanair, Wizz Air and other low-cost carriers to rebook or refund thousands of travellers. Ryanair has historically been the slowest major carrier to publish formal waiver terms — they typically issue a 24–48 hour notice. Given today is March 9 and the strike is March 12, Ryanair’s waiver is due today or tomorrow at the absolute latest.
What to do if Ryanair has not emailed you yet: Go to ryanair.com → My Trips → find your March 12 booking → the “Disrupted Flight” option should appear. If it does not yet appear, check again Monday morning — Ryanair typically activates it 48 hours before a confirmed disruption.
Wizz Air (CRL passengers) Same situation as Ryanair. Wizz Air operates from Charleroi and will publish waiver terms today or Monday. Critical reminder: Wizz Air defaults to offering 120% travel credit — if you want a cash refund, you must explicitly request it. Do not accept the credit voucher default unless you specifically want it.
easyJet easyJet operates from both BRU and CRL. Waiver terms expected today or Monday.
Lufthansa Group (Lufthansa, SWISS, Austrian — BRU passengers) Lufthansa Group includes Brussels Airlines — whose waiver is already open (above). For Lufthansa, SWISS, and Austrian flights from BRU connecting through their respective hubs, a group-level waiver is expected imminently.
The Charleroi closure creates a completely new dimension to this disruption that was not present in any previous coverage. The 65,000 Brussels Airport passengers at risk is a well-understood number. The additional 25,000+ Charleroi passengers are a surprise category — many of whom booked Charleroi specifically as a “safe” alternative after reading earlier Brussels disruption articles (including on this site).
The practical problem: Amsterdam, Paris CDG, Frankfurt, Cologne, and Düsseldorf must now absorb not just 65,000 BRU passengers but 90,000+ total passengers across both airports. Historical data shows economy-class fares rise 20–35% in the two-week window before a major Belgium strike. That window is now compressing to 72 hours — and the Charleroi closure announcement adds tens of thousands of additional passengers to the same pool of alternative seats.
The seat availability situation right now:
| Alternative Airport | Best Routes Available | Seat Status |
|---|---|---|
| Amsterdam (AMS) | Transatlantic (United, Delta), Middle East (Emirates, KLM), Asia | Tightening fast — book today |
| Paris CDG | Transatlantic (Air France, United, AA, Delta), Middle East | Tightening fast — book today |
| Frankfurt (FRA) | Lufthansa hub — global network | Available but filling |
| Düsseldorf (DUS) | Eurowings, Lufthansa, British Airways regional | Good availability — underused alternative |
| Cologne (CGN) | Eurowings, Ryanair | Good availability — underused alternative |
Düsseldorf and Cologne are underutilised alternatives. Most passengers default to Amsterdam or Paris as their first call — both are now under significant booking pressure. Düsseldorf (DUS) is 220km from Brussels (2 hours by car), has Lufthansa Group, British Airways, and Eurowings connections, and is significantly less congested this week than AMS or CDG. Consider it seriously.
All Belgian public transport — SNCB trains, STIB metro, De Lijn buses, TEC — is participating in the March 12 national strike. Rail links and local public transport in Brussels are also expected to suffer severe disruptions, so contingency ground transport should be arranged.
This means you cannot rely on a Brussels Midi → Amsterdam Centraal train on March 12 morning. You need a private transfer, a rental car, or to travel the evening before (March 11).
The March 11 evening strategy is the single best decision you can make:
Car rental from Brussels to alternative airports:
Car rental note: One-way international car rental (Belgium pickup, Netherlands/France/Germany return) is available but must be booked in advance — one-way international fees apply. Book at enterprise.be, hertz.be, or avis.be. Do not expect to walk in on March 11 and get a one-way car.
Pre-booked private transfers: Several Brussels-based transfer companies offer guaranteed March 11 airport runs. Prices will be elevated given demand — book today. Try:
Thalys/SNCF train to Paris CDG (if operating): Brussels Midi → Paris Nord: 1h22m. Note: SNCB (Belgian railway) workers are on strike — but SNCF (French railway) workers are NOT striking. The train may operate from the French side. Check thalys.com for March 12 Brussels departures. If the train runs, it is the fastest way to Paris CDG. Do not count on it — but check.
Travel-risk consultants Advito estimate that more than 32,000 corporate travellers hold BRU tickets for March 12; redirecting them to rail or nearby airports could cost companies upwards of €4 million in change fees and overtime.
If you are a corporate travel manager or business traveller with March 12 BRU departures:
Immediate actions:
Multinational companies with regional headquarters in Brussels are already activating travel-risk protocols and advising employees to avoid same-day connections through BRU.
The known-event insurance cutoff: Travel managers are being urged to shift critical staff movements to dates before or after March 12 or to routings via Amsterdam, Paris CDG, or Düsseldorf. Corporate policies purchased after approximately February 24 will likely exclude March 12 Belgium strike claims. Check your corporate travel insurance policy documentation.
The disruption does not end when the strike ends at midnight on March 12. March 12 disruption will not stay inside one calendar day. When a hub loses a full bank of departures, aircraft and crews end up out of position, which can spill into Friday, March 13, 2026, even for travelers who are not flying on strike day.
How the cascade works:
What this means for Friday March 13 passengers:
This is the 8th Belgian aviation strike since 2025. Belgium’s 2025 saw seven national actions that cancelled 2,400 flights and cost carriers an estimated €15 million in airline compensation claims. Despite that history, fixed compensation (€250–€600) is not owed for this strike — national general strikes are classified as extraordinary circumstances. Airlines will not pay and courts will uphold their refusal.
Any claims management company offering to recover EU261 fixed compensation for March 12 Brussels disruption is operating in bad faith. Do not pay them a fee.
Your airline must offer either:
The words to use: “I am requesting a full cash refund under EU Regulation 261/2004 Article 8(1)(a).”
Never accept a travel voucher unless you specifically want one. Airlines may default to offering credits — you are legally entitled to cash.
If you are at the airport and your flight is cancelled, your airline must provide:
Keep every receipt. File reimbursement online within 21 days.
Action 1 — Confirm your airport is actually open If you have any BRU or CRL booking on March 12 — both airports are confirmed cancelled or closed. There is no scenario in which you should go to either airport on March 12 without explicit confirmation from your airline that your specific flight is operating (which it will not be, for any departure).
Action 2 — Check if your airline’s waiver is live
Action 3 — Decide: shift dates or shift airport
Action 4 — Book alternative airport accommodation TODAY Airport hotels near Amsterdam Schiphol, Paris CDG, Frankfurt, and Düsseldorf are filling as thousands of passengers make the same decision. Book refundable rates so you can cancel if the situation changes. citizenm Amsterdam Airport, Sheraton Paris CDG, and Hilton Frankfurt Airport are the highest-capacity options near each hub.
Action 5 — Request cash, not credit When your airline contacts you (or when you contact them), you are entitled to a full cash refund. Do not accept a voucher, credit, or “future travel fund” unless you specifically want it. The law is unambiguous: Article 8 entitles you to cash. Request it explicitly.
The 12 March action will be the eighth national strike to hit Belgium’s aviation sector since 2025. At this point, March 12 in Brussels is not a surprise — it is the annual rhythm of Belgian labour relations. But the Charleroi closure is new, and it transforms the disruption scale from 65,000 affected passengers to 90,000+. Every passenger who thought Charleroi was their backup plan now needs a new backup plan.
Today, Sunday March 9, is the last realistic day to act. Tomorrow (Monday March 10) seats to alternative airports will tighten sharply as the remaining 72 hours of awareness kicks in. Tuesday morning (March 12) you wake up to a shuttered airport and no options.
Brussels Airlines and TUI Fly rebook windows are open now. United and Emirates are offering Amsterdam and Paris rerouting now. Air Canada and Cathay Pacific have had waivers live for weeks. The options are there — but only for passengers who act today.
| Airline / Resource | Rebook/Refund Portal | Phone (Last Resort) |
|---|---|---|
| Brussels Airlines | brusselsairlines.com/my-bookings | +32-2-723-2323 |
| TUI Fly | tuifly.be | +32-70-222-222 |
| Air Canada | aircanada.com/travel-notices | 1-888-247-2262 |
| Cathay Pacific | cathaypacific.com/manage | +32-2-711-8830 |
| United Airlines | united.com/my-trips | 1-800-864-8331 |
| Emirates | emirates.com/manage-booking | 0344-800-2777 (UK) |
| Ryanair | ryanair.com/my-trips | Online only |
| Wizz Air | wizzair.com/my-bookings | +36-1-777-9499 |
| easyJet | easyjet.com/disruption | 0330-365-5000 (UK) |
| Eurostar | eurostar.com/travel-info | 03432-186-186 |
| Brussels Airport | brusselsairport.be | +32-2-753-7753 |
| Charleroi Airport | charleroi-airport.com | +32-71-251-211 |
| SNCB (train status) | belgiantrain.be | 02-528-2828 |
Posted By : Vinay
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