Published on : 03 Jun 2026
Portugal’s nationwide general strike is LIVE today — Wednesday June 3, 2026. Real-time data confirms 360+ flight cancellations across Lisbon, Porto, Faro, Funchal, and Ponta Delgada airports. TAP Air Portugal is operating only 79 minimum-service flights — every other TAP departure is cancelled. Ryanair, easyJet, Lufthansa, British Airways, Air France, and Azul Linhas Aéreas are all disrupted. Lisbon Metro has confirmed a complete halt — all stations locked. Buses, ferries, suburban rail, and trams are severely reduced. Portugal’s entire transport network has stopped for 24 hours. Disruption will continue into June 4 and 5 as aircraft and crews reposition. If you are at a Portuguese airport today — or flying to Portugal tomorrow — read this now.
The walkout, called by CGTP — Portugal’s largest trade union confederation — is the country’s second general strike in six months and the most operationally significant aviation disruption in Europe since the Brussels strike of May 12, 2026. The strike is a protest against the government’s “Trabalho XXI” labour reform package, which rewrites over 100 articles of the Portuguese Labour Code — extending fixed-term contracts from two to three years, making dismissals easier, and loosening restrictions on outsourcing. Nine months of negotiations between unions, business groups, and the government collapsed without agreement before the bill was sent to Parliament, triggering the coordinated national walkout.
For travellers: this is not a dispute about aviation specifically. The strike involves cabin crew, airport ground handlers, security personnel, air traffic controllers, railway workers, metro staff, bus drivers, ferry workers, teachers, and healthcare workers simultaneously. The combined absence of ground handlers, security staff, and cabin crew has created a cascading airport shutdown across every commercial airport in Portugal — not just TAP, but every carrier that relies on Portuguese ground services.
Published: Wednesday 3 June 2026 — LIVE updates Strike Status: LIVE and active — 24-hour walkout running midnight June 3 to midnight June 3–4 Called by: CGTP (Portugal’s largest trade union confederation) + SNPVAC (cabin crew union, 5,000+ members) Dispute cause: Trabalho XXI labour reform package — 9 months of failed talks Also joining: FECTRANS (transport workers) · Metro/bus/tram workers · CP railway · Carris bus · Transtejo/Soflusa ferries · teachers · healthcare · public sector Total flights cancelled (live): 360+ confirmed — up to 500+ final count expected TAP Air Portugal: Operating ONLY 79 minimum-service flights — all other TAP services cancelled TAP Cancellations: Up to 300 services — approximately 33% of daily programme Cabin crew absent: 79% SNPVAC vote to strike — near-total TAP crew absence Airports affected: Lisbon Humberto Delgado (LIS) · Porto Francisco Sá Carneiro (OPO) · Faro (FAO) · Funchal (FNC) · Ponta Delgada (PDL) Worst-hit airport: Lisbon Humberto Delgado — highest volume hub in Portugal Other carriers disrupted: Ryanair · easyJet · Lufthansa · British Airways · Air France · Azul Linhas Aéreas · Portugália · SATA · Etihad (Abu Dhabi–Lisbon pre-cancelled) Carriers aiming to run normally: Ryanair + easyJet (announced intent to operate) — BUT ground handling disruption causing delays and last-minute cancellations regardless Ground transport — Lisbon Metro: FULL SHUTDOWN — all stations locked midnight June 2 to early June 4 Ground transport — Lisbon buses (Carris): Severely reduced service all day Ground transport — Porto Metro: Severely reduced Ground transport — CP railways: Stoppages — SFRCI + SMAQ unions confirmed Ground transport — Ferries (Transtejo/Soflusa): Reduced service across Tagus river crossings Protected flights (Court-mandated minimum services): ✅ 100% mainland–Madeira routes · ✅ 100% mainland–Azores routes · ✅ 35% minimum of international flights guaranteed Brazil–Portugal routes: TAP + Azul pre-cancelled multiple June 2 and June 3 departures from São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Recife United Airlines waiver: Active — covers June 2–3 travel — free rebooking by June 6, same cabin, no fare difference Knock-on disruption: June 4 and June 5 — aircraft and crew repositioning expected to cause cascading delays at non-Portuguese European hubs EC261 status: Refund + rerouting GUARANTEED — additional compensation depends on circumstances (see rights guide below) Passengers affected today: Est. 60,000–90,000
The June 3 strike did not emerge overnight. It is the direct result of nine months of failed negotiations between Portugal’s government, trade unions, and business groups over the Trabalho XXI labour reform package — a set of proposals that would fundamentally restructure Portuguese employment law.
The reforms extend fixed-term employment contracts from two to three years, make it easier for companies to dismiss workers without the current protections, and loosen restrictions on outsourcing work to non-union contractors and workers outside Portugal. Unions representing workers across every sector of the Portuguese economy — including aviation — argue the reforms represent the most significant erosion of worker protections since Portugal’s post-dictatorship constitution was written in 1976.
CGTP, Portugal’s largest trade union confederation, called the general strike after the Cabinet approved the reform package on May 14 and sent it directly to Parliament, bypassing the further rounds of consultation the unions demanded. SNPVAC — the national cabin crew union with over 5,000 members — voted 79% in favour of joining the strike. That near-total participation rate is what drives TAP’s near-total cancellation today.
This is Portugal’s second general strike in six months. The December 2025 strike cancelled approximately 400 flights and caused 48-72 hours of knock-on disruption. The June 3 action is occurring at a significantly higher-demand moment — the opening week of the European summer holiday season, coinciding with the Lisbon Forum, Semana do Brasil events, and the first wave of FIFA World Cup-related transatlantic traffic.
| Airport | Code | Status | Key Carriers Disrupted | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lisbon Humberto Delgado | LIS | 🔴 SEVERELY DISRUPTED | TAP · Ryanair · easyJet · Lufthansa · BA · Air France · United · Azul | Hardest-hit airport. Metro shutdown — all stations locked. Zero Carris buses. Uber/Bolt surge pricing. |
| Porto Francisco Sá Carneiro | OPO | 🔴 SEVERELY DISRUPTED | TAP · Ryanair · easyJet · Lufthansa · BA | Second-hardest hit. Porto Metro severely reduced. CP rail stoppages from OPO to Campanhã. |
| Faro | FAO | 🟠 DISRUPTED | Ryanair · easyJet · TAP regional | Major UK holiday airport. Ground handling disrupted. Buses to Albufeira, Lagos, Portimão severely reduced. |
| Funchal (Madeira) | FNC | 🟡 PROTECTED SERVICE | TAP · Ryanair | Court-mandated 100% mainland–Madeira minimum service. Some delays likely from LIS/OPO cascade. |
| Ponta Delgada (Azores) | PDL | 🟡 PROTECTED SERVICE | SATA · TAP | Court-mandated 100% mainland–Azores minimum service. Azores inter-island routes may still be affected. |
TAP Air Portugal is today operating the absolute minimum service level mandated by the Portuguese Arbitration Court: 79 flights. In practical terms, that means TAP has cancelled approximately 221 scheduled flights today — roughly 33% of its entire daily operation of approximately 300 services.
TAP’s statement, confirmed on the airline’s Facebook page: “General Strike in Portugal – June 3rd. TAP will operate a total of 79 flights under the Minimum Services during the General Strike scheduled for June 3 in Portugal. TAP is contacting all Customers with cancelled flights and who have not yet changed their bookings so that the best travel alternatives can be found together.”
Which TAP flights are protected today (minimum service)?
Which TAP flights are most at risk today?
TAP contact today:
| Carrier | Pre-strike Position | Live Status June 3 | Action Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ryanair | Announced intention to operate normally | Ground handling disruptions causing delays and last-minute cancellations at LIS, OPO, FAO | Check Ryanair app every 30 min. Do NOT go to airport without flight confirmed |
| easyJet | Anticipated some disruption — 800 cabin crew in Portuguese bases (LIS/OPO/FAO) | Delays and cancellations at all three Portuguese bases | Check easyJet app. UK261 applies for UK-origin delays of 3+ hours |
| Lufthansa | Standard operations planned | Disrupted — LIS and OPO ground handling causing delays on Frankfurt and Munich routes | Lufthansa app + check flightaware.com/live |
| British Airways | Standard operations planned | Disrupted at LIS — London Heathrow–Lisbon and London Gatwick–Faro both affected | BA app. UK261 applies — up to £520/€600 if 3+ hours late at final destination |
| Air France | Standard operations planned | Disrupted — Paris CDG–Lisbon affected by ground handling shortages | Air France app. EU261 applies |
| Azul Linhas Aéreas | Pre-cancelled June 2 + June 3 Brazil–Portugal flights | All Azul Brazil–Portugal routes suspended today | Contact Azul Brazil: 4003-1118 (capitals) / 0800-887-1118 (other) |
| Etihad Airways | Pre-cancelled Abu Dhabi–Lisbon June 3 | Route cancelled today — no service | Contact Etihad: +971 600 555 600 |
| United Airlines | Travel waiver issued — free rebooking June 2–6 | Operating with disruption — ground handling limits | Waiver: united.com/travelnotices — rebook by June 6 free of charge |
Lisbon Metro: COMPLETE SHUTDOWN. The Lisbon Metro operator confirmed a total halt to all metro services from 11pm June 2 through to early hours June 4. Every station is locked. The Aerobus route (Metro’s airport shuttle) does not run without metro staff. The Oriente and Entrecampos connections to Lisbon airport are completely severed.
Carris buses (Lisbon): Severely reduced. The 744 Aerobus service specifically connecting central Lisbon to the airport is operating at minimum or not at all. Do not rely on Carris buses for airport access today.
CP (Portuguese Railways): Both SFRCI (ticket inspectors) and SMAQ (train operators) have confirmed participation. Suburban rail connecting Lisbon Oriente, Lisbon Cais do Sodré, and Lisbon Rossio to outlying areas is severely disrupted. Alfa Pendular inter-city services (Lisbon–Porto) are also affected.
Transtejo/Soflusa ferries: Tagus river ferry crossings severely reduced — affecting passengers crossing from the southern bank to Lisbon.
Taxis and rideshare: Black taxis and licensed rideshare (Uber, Bolt, Cabify) are operating but with extreme surge pricing. Wait times at Lisbon airport reported at 45–90 minutes this morning. Pre-book the night before where possible — walk-up availability today is extremely limited.
Driving to the airport: Road congestion is severe across Lisbon and Porto as commuters unable to use public transport resort to private vehicles. Allow 2+ hours minimum from central Lisbon to the airport today.
Porto ground transport:
Faro ground transport:
The disruption began 24 hours before the strike itself. TAP Air Portugal and Azul Linhas Aéreas — the two primary carriers operating the São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Recife to Lisbon corridor — began removing June 2 and June 3 departures from their reservation systems in the days preceding the strike. At least a dozen Brazil–Portugal departures have been proactively cancelled.
This is one of the busiest long-haul corridors into Europe from the Portuguese-speaking world, carrying both leisure passengers and the substantial Brazilian diaspora community in Portugal. The timing of the strike — coinciding with the Semana do Brasil (Week of Brazil) cultural events in Lisbon — has made this pre-emptive cancellation especially impactful.
Azul passengers contact: +55 4003-1118 (Brazil capitals) / +55 0800-887-1118 (Brazil other cities) TAP Brazil passengers contact: +55 11 3040-3048
| Metric | December 2025 strike | June 3, 2026 strike |
|---|---|---|
| TAP flights operated | 63 of 283 scheduled (22%) | 79 minimum service flights |
| Total cancellations | ~400 | 360+ confirmed (live) — up to 500+ final |
| Metro shutdown | Partial | Complete — all Lisbon stations locked |
| CP railway impact | Moderate | Severe — both unions confirmed |
| Season | December (lower demand) | June (peak summer season) |
| Brazil–Portugal routes | Minor disruption | Pre-cancelled June 2–3 |
| Knock-on days | 2–3 days | 2–3 days expected June 4–5 |
| FIFA World Cup context | Not applicable | World Cup opens in 8 days — 6M+ fans flying |
The June 3 strike is occurring at significantly higher baseline demand than the December 2025 action — Lisbon Humberto Delgado was handling near-record passenger volumes when the strike landed. The recovery from today’s 360+ cancellations will be slower precisely because every available replacement seat in the European summer market is already occupied.
This is the most important legal distinction for passengers today, and the answer is not straightforward:
EC261 refund and rerouting rights — UNCONDITIONAL: Regardless of whether the strike is classed as extraordinary circumstances, every passenger on a cancelled flight today is entitled under EC261/EU261 to:
There is NO exception to the refund or rerouting right. Airlines cannot refuse this.
EC261 duty of care — UNCONDITIONAL: While stranded at the airport today, every passenger on a cancelled or significantly delayed flight is entitled to:
Ask for these at the airport check-in desk or gate agent. If the airline does not provide vouchers, pay for reasonable expenses yourself and keep ALL receipts — you can claim reimbursement later.
EC261 financial compensation — CONDITIONAL: The €600/£520 additional cash compensation is where strikes get complicated. Under EC261, airlines can avoid paying financial compensation if the cancellation was caused by “extraordinary circumstances” that could not have been avoided even if all reasonable measures had been taken. Industrial action by an airline’s own staff (such as TAP’s cabin crew) may NOT be classed as extraordinary circumstances by courts — meaning TAP passengers may have grounds for the €600 compensation in addition to a refund.
However: strikes by external ground handling staff, airport security workers, or metro/rail workers that cascade into flight disruptions are more likely to be classed as extraordinary circumstances, reducing airlines’ financial compensation obligation.
The legal distinction today:
| Flight Type | Distance | Max Compensation | Claim Portal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Within Portugal / short-haul to Europe (under 1,500km) | e.g. Lisbon–London Gatwick | €250 per person | airhelp.com |
| Medium-haul within EU (1,500–3,500km) | e.g. Porto–Helsinki, Lisbon–Athens | €400 per person | airhelp.com |
| Long-haul (over 3,500km) | e.g. Lisbon–New York, Lisbon–São Paulo | €600 per person | airhelp.com |
| UK-origin flights (UK261) | All distances to/from UK | £520 per person | bott.co.uk |
Evidence to collect today:
United Airlines has issued a formal Travel Alert covering its Portuguese operations for June 2–3, 2026:
The strike ends at midnight tonight. But the disruption will NOT end when the strike does. Aircraft and crews that are displaced today — sitting at Lisbon, Porto, and Faro without proper positioning — need 48–72 hours to return to their correct scheduling positions across the European network.
What this means for June 4 passengers:
Passengers with June 4 and June 5 flights to or from Portugal should check their flight status on the morning of travel — do not assume normal operations have resumed.
At Lisbon Humberto Delgado (LIS):
At Porto Francisco Sá Carneiro (OPO):
At Faro (FAO):
| Action | Contact / Link |
|---|---|
| TAP Air Portugal flight status | flytap.com → My Bookings |
| TAP customer service (Portugal) | +351 211 234 408 |
| TAP customer service (UK) | +44 20 3813 1499 |
| TAP social media updates | @TAPAirPortugal |
| Ryanair flight status | ryanair.com |
| easyJet flight status | easyjet.com |
| United Airlines travel waiver | united.com/travelnotices |
| British Airways flight status | britishairways.com → Manage My Booking |
| Lufthansa flight status | lufthansa.com |
| Air France flight status | airfrance.com |
| Lisbon Airport live status | ana.pt/en/opo/flights |
| Porto Airport live status | ana.pt/en/opo/flights |
| FlightAware — Lisbon live | flightaware.com/live/airport/LPPT |
| FlightAware — Porto live | flightaware.com/live/airport/LPPR |
| EC261 cash compensation claim | airhelp.com |
| UK261 compensation specialist | bott.co.uk |
| EU consumer rights portal | europa.eu/youreurope |
| Portugal strike updates (Portuguese) | theportugalnews.com |
| Uber Lisbon | uber.com |
| Bolt Lisbon / Porto | bolt.eu |
Portugal’s nationwide general strike is LIVE on June 3, 2026 — the country’s most significant aviation disruption since the December 2025 walkout. Real-time data confirms 360+ flight cancellations across Lisbon, Porto, Faro, Funchal, and Ponta Delgada, with up to 500 total expected by end of day. TAP Air Portugal is operating only 79 minimum-service flights — every other TAP service is cancelled today. Ryanair, easyJet, Lufthansa, British Airways, Air France, and Azul are all disrupted. Lisbon Metro has confirmed a complete shutdown — every station locked. Buses, ferries, suburban rail, and trams are severely reduced. Court-mandated minimum services protect 100% of mainland–Madeira and mainland–Azores routes, and at least 35% of international flights. Under EC261/EU261, every cancelled flight passenger is entitled to a full refund or rerouting regardless of cause, plus meals and accommodation while stranded. Additional €600 financial compensation may apply for TAP passengers whose own cabin crew are on strike — a distinction EU courts are increasingly recognising as not qualifying as extraordinary circumstances. Disruption will continue into June 4 and 5 as aircraft and crews reposition across the European network.
Your five-point action plan if your Portugal flight is cancelled today:
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Posted By : Vinay
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