Spain ATC Strike Starts TOMORROW April 17: 48-Hour Last Chance Guide — Lanzarote & Fuerteventura Dual Strike Crisis, NO Compensation, 14 Airports — Everything UK, Irish & Australian Passengers Must Do Right Now

Published on : 15 Apr 2026

Spain ATC Strike Starts TOMORROW April 17: 48-Hour Last Chance Guide — Lanzarote & Fuerteventura Dual Strike Crisis, NO Compensation, 14 Airports — Everything UK, Irish & Australian Passengers Must Do Right Now

This is your last window to act. The SAERCO air traffic controller strike begins at midnight tonight into Friday April 17, 2026. In less than 48 hours, ATC at 14 Spanish airports will go on indefinite strike — with no confirmed end date, no mediation deal reached, and no indication from either side that a resolution is imminent.

This strike is structurally different from — and more dangerous than — the Groundforce baggage handlers’ dispute that has disrupted Spain since March 30. Air traffic controller strikes have the potential to be the most disruptive type of airline strike, since it affects all airlines in the airport. For travellers, this strike means that fewer flights will be able to operate in the affected airports. Additionally, the strike could cause major delays, with late arrivals meaning flights are pushed further and further back.

And critically: since air traffic control strikes are considered “extraordinary circumstances,” airlines may not owe passengers compensation for delays and cancellations, although they must still offer rebooking or refunds.

This means everything you might do in the next 48 hours — checking your airline’s waiver, checking your travel insurance, deciding whether to rebook — could save you hundreds of pounds. Everything you fail to do could leave you with no flight, no payout, and no options.

There is one additional crisis your travel agent has probably not told you: Lanzarote and Fuerteventura face a DUAL strike from April 17. Both airports are in the SAERCO network — meaning ATC controllers will strike there — AND both airports are in the active Groundforce zone. If Groundforce’s current talks suspension ends and the baggage handlers resume their Mon/Wed/Fri stoppages, Lanzarote and Fuerteventura will simultaneously lose both their air traffic controllers and their baggage handlers. No other Spanish airport faces this double exposure.

If you are flying to or from any of the 14 SAERCO airports from April 17 onwards, your window to act is measured in hours.


Published: April 15, 2026
Strike Starts: 00:00 midnight tonight into Friday April 17, 2026 (CET)
Duration: Indefinite — no end date
Airports Affected: 14 SAERCO-operated Spanish airports
Mediation Status: USCA/CCOO requested SIMA mediation — SAERCO repeatedly postponed/cancelled scheduled meetings — no deal
Compensation: ❌ NO EU261 cash compensation — ATC strike = extraordinary circumstances
Refund/Rebooking: ✅ Airlines MUST offer this regardless
Duty of Care: ✅ Meals and accommodation still required — but airlines may dispute this
DUAL RISK airports: 🔴 Lanzarote (ACE) + Fuerteventura (FUE) — SAERCO ATC + potential Groundforce resumption
Travel Insurance: May cover strike — ONLY if purchased BEFORE strike was publicly known (approximately April 7–8, 2026)


Why This Strike Is More Dangerous Than Groundforce

The Groundforce dispute has been running since March 30. It has caused real disruption: bags abandoned at El Prat, one-hour average delays at multiple airports, thousands of suitcases piled at carousels. But Groundforce workers handle bags and ramp operations. Unlike the Groundforce situation, where some compensation routes remain open, an ATC strike is classified as an extraordinary circumstance under EU law. As air traffic control strikes are classed as “extraordinary circumstances”, airlines are not usually required to pay compensation for delays or cancellations, although they must still offer rebooking or refunds. Travel Tourister

The key differences between the two crises:

Factor Groundforce Strike SAERCO ATC Strike
Who it affects Airlines using Groundforce handling ALL airlines at affected airports
What gets disrupted Bags, ramp, boarding Aircraft movement — entire flight operations
Can flights depart? Usually yes (without some bags) Potentially NO — ATC manages all movements
EU261 compensation? Extraordinary circumstances — generally NO Extraordinary circumstances — definitively NO
Refund/rebooking? ✅ Yes — airlines must offer ✅ Yes — airlines must offer
Duty of care (meals/hotel)? ✅ Usually provided ⚠️ Grey area — airlines may dispute due to extraordinary circumstances
Ryanair/Jet2/TUI/BA all affected? Only if they use Groundforce ✅ YES — every carrier at the airport
Can I check which airline? Yes — by Groundforce contract Irrelevant — ATC covers every flight

The fundamental difference: with Groundforce, you could check whether your airline uses Groundforce handling and reduce your risk. With SAERCO, every single airline operating at the 14 affected airports is exposed. Ryanair, easyJet, Jet2, TUI, British Airways, Vueling, Iberia, Binter — all of them. There is no carrier to switch to.


🗺️ The 14 SAERCO Airports — Full List, UK Risk Level, and Routes

The strike will affect 14 airports across Spain including: Madrid-Cuatro Vientos, Lanzarote, Fuerteventura, La Palma, El Hierro, La Gomera, Castellón, Burgos, Huesca, Ciudad Real, Vigo, A Coruña, Jerez and Seville.

Airport IATA Region UK Risk Key UK Routes
Lanzarote ACE Canary Islands 🔴🔴 DUAL RISK Gatwick, Manchester, Stansted, Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Newcastle
Fuerteventura FUE Canary Islands 🔴🔴 DUAL RISK Gatwick, Manchester, Stansted, Birmingham, Bristol
La Palma SPC Canary Islands 🔴 HIGH Gatwick, Manchester (limited direct UK service)
El Hierro VDE Canary Islands 🟠 MEDIUM Inter-island only — affects island hopping itineraries
La Gomera GMZ Canary Islands 🟠 MEDIUM Inter-island only — cruise and yacht connections
Seville SVQ Andalucia 🔴 HIGH Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester, Bristol, Edinburgh
Jerez (Cádiz) XRY Andalucia 🟡 LOWER Stansted, some seasonal UK charter service
Vigo VGO Galicia 🟠 MEDIUM Limited UK direct service — mainly connecting
A Coruña LCG Galicia 🟡 LOWER Limited UK direct service
Madrid-Cuatro Vientos LECU Madrid 🟡 LOWER General aviation only — not commercial terminal
Castellón-Costa Azahar CDT Valencia 🟡 LOWER Limited charter service
Burgos RGS Castile & León 🟡 LOWER Minimal commercial service
Huesca HSK Aragon 🟡 LOWER Ski charter service
Ciudad Real CQM Castile-La Mancha 🟡 LOWER Minimal commercial service

The three airports that matter most for UK passengers:

  1. Lanzarote — highest-volume UK Canary Islands destination, also faces Groundforce dual risk
  2. Fuerteventura — second highest-volume UK Canary Islands destination, also faces Groundforce dual risk
  3. Seville — primary UK entry point for Andalucia city breaks and southern Spain holidays

🔴 CRITICAL: Lanzarote and Fuerteventura — The Dual Strike Crisis

This is the most important section for UK passengers in the Canary Islands. Lanzarote and Fuerteventura are the only two airports in Spain facing simultaneous risk from both the SAERCO ATC strike and the Groundforce baggage handlers’ dispute.

Those planning on flying into and out of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands may face even bigger issues as both ground handling staff and air traffic controllers will be staging walkouts there.

The sequence of risk:

SAERCO ATC strike (from April 17, 00:00): Air traffic controllers at Lanzarote ACE and Fuerteventura FUE walk out. Minimum services will be ordered by the Spanish government — but the extent and timing of those minimum services is not yet confirmed. In a minimum-services scenario, ATC manages a reduced number of movements per hour, meaning airlines must cut their schedules to fit within the permitted capacity window. Your flight may operate — but on a significantly reduced schedule. The morning peak departure bank (06:00–10:00) and the afternoon arrival peak (13:00–18:00) are the highest-risk windows.

Groundforce resumption risk (from April 13 or any subsequent Mon/Wed/Fri): The Groundforce indefinite strike mandate remains in force. Talks are ongoing, but no deal has been signed. If Groundforce resumes on Monday April 21, Wednesday April 23, or any subsequent date, Lanzarote and Fuerteventura will simultaneously have ATC running at minimum services AND ground handling staff on strike windows.

What this dual risk means in practice:

  • ATC minimum services = reduced number of aircraft movements permitted per hour
  • Groundforce strike windows = baggage loading at minimum legal staffing levels
  • Combined = an airport that can handle fewer flights AND loads bags more slowly
  • Result: higher probability of outright cancellations (not just delays) at peak periods

UK carriers most exposed at Lanzarote and Fuerteventura:

  • Jet2 — highest-frequency UK charter carrier to both islands; tight turnarounds highly vulnerable
  • TUI — major package holiday carrier to both islands
  • easyJet — operates Gatwick and other UK routes to both airports
  • British Airways — operates Gatwick to Lanzarote
  • Ryanair — Stansted and other UK to both islands
  • Tui Airways, Jet2, Monarch-successor charters — high-frequency weekend charter blocks

Why the Unions Went on Strike — and Why a Quick Deal Is Unlikely

The unions say the dispute stems from long-standing structural issues, including staff shortages, work overload and irregular scheduling practices. They warn that accumulated fatigue and stress among controllers could affect operational concentration, prompting the move toward strike action after failed attempts to resume negotiations. Among the outstanding topics are the definition of actual staffing levels, how absences are covered, fatigue management protocols and the criteria used to design shift schedules.

The unions claim controllers are facing insufficient rest periods, unpredictable schedules, and what they call an atmosphere of instability.

Critically — and this is different from the Groundforce dispute — the unions are demanding compliance with staffing levels and working conditions, not primarily wage increases. Workers are demanding sufficient staffing levels in all control towers, respect for rest periods, and working conditions compatible with safety and professionalism. The air traffic controllers’ representatives emphasise that their demands “are not economic in nature” — they are not requesting salary increases or more vacation time, but rather “an increase in staffing levels to guarantee operational safety”.

This matters for the resolution timeline. A wage dispute can potentially be resolved with a number, agreed, signed, and done. A dispute centred on staffing levels requires SAERCO to hire more controllers, train them, certify them, and deploy them — a process that takes months, not days. There is no easy number to bridge the gap. Observers note that similar disputes in 2023 and 2024 were only resolved after several weeks of rolling cancellations.

Before issuing the strike notice, union representatives attempted to reopen talks with SAERCO. However, they say scheduled meetings were repeatedly postponed or cancelled, leaving key issues unresolved. This is not a dispute that broke down over the last few days — it is the culmination of years of failed negotiations.


⚠️ The Compensation Reality — Why This Strike Is Worse for Your Wallet

This is the section most UK passengers flying to Spain will not want to read — but need to.

ATC Strike = Extraordinary Circumstances = NO Fixed Cash Compensation

When the Groundforce baggage handlers strike, a legal grey area exists — some experts argue that if a carrier chooses to use a specific contractor, that contractor’s industrial action is partially within the airline’s business sphere. The debate matters because of EU261.

With SAERCO, there is no grey area. Air traffic control is a government-licensed function operated by a third-party under regulatory authority. When ATC staff strike, airlines have no operational alternative — they cannot fly without ATC clearance. The European Court of Justice, the UK Civil Aviation Authority, and every major airline legal team agree: ATC strikes are extraordinary circumstances.

What this means for you:


No €250–€600 EU261 cash compensation for cancelled or delayed flights
No £220–£520 UK261 cash compensation for cancelled or delayed flights
Full cash refund OR rebooking — you still have this right, always
Duty of care under Article 9 — meals and refreshments for delays of 2+ hours (though airlines may resist this for ATC extraordinary circumstances — push firmly and keep receipts)
Hotel accommodation + transport if stranded overnight — same caveat: push firmly

The exact words to use if your flight is cancelled: “My flight has been cancelled. I am requesting a full cash refund to my original payment method. I understand the cause may be extraordinary circumstances, but my right to a refund or rebooking is not affected by that classification.”

The exact words to use if you need meals at the airport: “My flight has been delayed over two hours. Under Article 9 of EU Regulation 261/2004, I am requesting meal vouchers. Extraordinary circumstances affect compensation, not duty of care.”

Travel Insurance — The 48-Hour Insurance Window

This is the most time-critical decision in this article. Travel insurance for strike coverage typically only applies if you purchased the policy before the strike was publicly announced.

The SAERCO strike was officially pre-announced on approximately April 7–8, 2026. The strike is due to begin on April 17 and will affect workers employed by Saerco at 14 airports. The announcement was public and widely reported.

What this means:

  • Bought insurance before approximately April 7–8, 2026: You very likely have strike coverage — call your insurer immediately to confirm and understand your claim process
  • Bought insurance after approximately April 7–8, 2026: Strike was already a known event — most policies exclude known events from strike coverage — call your insurer now to understand your exact position
  • Have no travel insurance: This is your final window to purchase emergency travel insurance — note that most insurers will not cover known upcoming strikes from the moment of announcement

Call your insurer today. Do not wait until your flight is cancelled.


🚨 Your 48-Hour Action Plan — Do These Steps Before Midnight

Step 1 — Confirm if Your Airport is in the SAERCO Strike Zone (Right Now)

Check the airport list above. If your outbound or inbound flight touches any of the 14 airports — Lanzarote, Fuerteventura, La Palma, El Hierro, La Gomera, Seville, Jerez, Vigo, A Coruña, Castellón, Burgos, Huesca, Ciudad Real, or Madrid-Cuatro Vientos — you are inside the risk zone from midnight April 17.

If your airport is not on this list (Málaga, Barcelona, Madrid Barajas, Palma, Tenerife Sur/Norte, Gran Canaria, Alicante, Valencia, Ibiza) — you are not directly affected by the SAERCO strike. However, if your itinerary involves a connection through a SAERCO airport, your connecting leg is at risk.

Step 2 — Check Your Airline’s Spain Travel Waiver (Right Now)

Every major UK carrier operating Spain routes has either issued or should issue a Spain travel disruption waiver allowing free date changes around the SAERCO strike period. Search your airline’s website or app for “Spain waiver” or “Spain disruption.”

Carriers known to issue Spain disruption waivers:

  • Ryanair: ryanair.com → My Trips → check for disruption waiver
  • easyJet: easyjet.com → Manage Booking → disruption options
  • Jet2: jet2.com → Manage My Booking → date change options during strike
  • TUI: tui.co.uk → Manage Your Holiday → contact team for strike-related changes
  • British Airways: ba.com → Manage My Booking → search for active travel waivers
  • Vueling, Iberia: Contact directly via airline websites

A waiver allows you to move your travel dates for free, potentially to before the strike starts or after a potential resolution. This is your most powerful tool.

Step 3 — Call Your Tour Operator If You’re on a Package Holiday

If your trip is a package holiday (flight + accommodation sold together), your rights are stronger than for flight-only passengers. Under the UK Package Travel Regulations 2018, your tour operator may be required to:


✅ Offer you an alternative holiday of comparable standard
✅ Offer a full refund if no comparable alternative is available
✅ Communicate proactively with you about significant changes

Call your tour operator today — before midnight — and ask them directly: “If my flight to [Lanzarote/Fuerteventura/Seville] is cancelled due to the SAERCO ATC strike from April 17, what are my options under the Package Travel Regulations?”

Step 4 — Call Your Travel Insurer (Before midnight tonight)

As explained above, your travel insurance strike coverage depends on when you purchased your policy relative to when the strike was announced. Call your insurer today and specifically ask: “Does my policy cover travel disruption caused by the SAERCO ATC strike in Spain starting April 17, 2026, given that this strike was publicly announced on approximately April 7–8?”

Get the answer in writing — email or webchat transcript.

Step 5 — Pack Essentials in Cabin Baggage for Lanzarote + Fuerteventura Passengers

If you are flying to Lanzarote or Fuerteventura and your flight is not cancelled, assume you may arrive without your checked luggage. The Groundforce dispute has already been leaving bags behind. From April 17, even if your flight operates, the combination of ATC minimum services and potential Groundforce resumption creates a high probability of baggage disruption.

Pack in your carry-on: essential medications, one change of clothes, phone chargers, valuables, travel documents, and anything you cannot replace at your destination.

Step 6 — Know the Minimum Services Reality

Spain’s government will issue a minimum services order for the SAERCO strike — this legally compels a percentage of controllers to continue working during the strike. Minimum services for ATC strikes in Spain have historically been set between 50–100% depending on the airport type, time of day, and flight classification.

What minimum services mean in practice:

  • The most protected flights are international (UK → Spain, Spain → UK) and domestic connections
  • The most vulnerable are leisure charter flights, secondary routes, and less frequently used airports
  • Morning (06:00–10:00) and afternoon (14:00–20:00) peak windows are typically fully covered
  • Late night (22:00–midnight) and early morning (00:00–06:00) have reduced coverage

Minimum services do NOT mean business as usual. They mean the airport functions at reduced capacity. At a high-traffic airport like Lanzarote in April, even a 20% capacity reduction during peak windows can trigger a cascade of cancelled and delayed flights across the entire day.


📋 Flight-by-Flight Risk Guide — Scenarios and What to Do

Your Situation Risk Level Recommended Action
Flying from UK to Lanzarote April 17–18 🔴🔴 CRITICAL Check waiver immediately. Consider rebooking before/after strike.
Flying from UK to Fuerteventura April 17–18 🔴🔴 CRITICAL Same as above — dual risk.
Flying from UK to Lanzarote April 19–25 🔴 HIGH Strike indefinite — no safe rebooking window within Spain.
Flying from UK to Seville April 17–19 🔴 HIGH Check waiver. Seville has limited alternative routing.
Flying from Lanzarote to UK April 17–18 🔴🔴 CRITICAL Contact airline now. Check waiver for early departure option.
Flying inter-island from/to SAERCO airport 🔴 HIGH Inter-island Canary flights rely entirely on SAERCO ATC.
Cruise turnaround at Las Palmas / Arrecife 🟠 MEDIUM Monitor — cruise terminals use Binter/regional flights for transfers.
Connecting through Seville or Lanzarote 🟠 MEDIUM Check if your connection can be rerouted through a non-SAERCO airport.
Flying to Málaga, Barcelona, Madrid-Barajas 🟢 LOW Not SAERCO airports — direct effect minimal. Watch for network cascade.
Flying to Tenerife Sur, Gran Canaria 🟢 LOW Not SAERCO airports — but inter-island transfer risk if visiting SAERCO islands.

✅ What Airlines MUST Still Provide (Even For ATC Extraordinary Circumstances)

Even though ATC strikes remove the obligation for cash compensation, airlines retain other obligations that many passengers do not know to claim:

Refund or rebooking (always applies):
✅ Full cash refund to original payment method if your flight is cancelled
✅ Rebooking on the next available flight to your destination at no additional cost
✅ Your choice between refund and rebooking — not the airline’s

Duty of care (you must ask — airlines will not always volunteer it):
✅ Meals and refreshments proportionate to your wait time (2+ hour delay)
✅ Hotel accommodation if you are stranded overnight
✅ Transport between airport and hotel
✅ Two telephone calls, emails, or faxes

The duty of care grey area: Some airlines will argue that extraordinary circumstances removes the duty of care obligation under Article 9. This is legally incorrect — Article 9 duty of care applies regardless of the cause of the delay. Push firmly, keep all receipts, and if refused, file a complaint with the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) after your trip.

The exact words to use at the airport: “My flight has been cancelled due to the ATC strike. Regardless of extraordinary circumstances, under Article 9 of EU Regulation 261/2004, I am entitled to meal vouchers and hotel accommodation. Please provide these or reimburse my expenses.”


🔑 Key Resources and Contacts

Resource URL / Phone
UK FCDO Spain Travel Advice gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/spain
Civil Aviation Authority (UK) caa.co.uk/passengers
EU261 Official Guide europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/travel/passenger-rights/air
AENA Airport Live Status aena.es/en/airports-and-fwn.html
Ryanair Manage Booking ryanair.com → My Trips
easyJet Disruption Centre easyjet.com/en/travel-disruption
Jet2 Manage Booking jet2.com → Manage My Booking
TUI Spain Travel Help tui.co.uk/help/contact-us
British Airways Disruption ba.com/content/public/en/en_gb/information/travel-disruptions
Iberia / Vueling iberia.com / vueling.com
USCA Union (ATC strike announcements) usca.es
Spanish Aviation Authority AESA seguridadaerea.gob.es
ENAIRE (Spain’s ATC provider — NOT SAERCO) enaire.es

Bottom Line

The SAERCO air traffic controller strike starts at midnight tonight into Friday April 17, 2026. It is indefinite, it affects 14 Spanish airports, it gives you no cash compensation, and it cannot be resolved in days — the staffing dispute at its core requires months of operational changes, not just a wage figure.

If you are flying to or from any SAERCO airport from April 17 onwards — your last actionable window is the next few hours:

  1. Check your airline’s Spain disruption waiver — free date changes may be available right now
  2. Call your travel insurer today — confirm whether your policy covers this strike
  3. Call your tour operator if on a package holiday — understand your UK Package Travel Regulations rights
  4. Lanzarote/Fuerteventura passengers — you face DUAL strike risk from both SAERCO and potential Groundforce resumption — treat this as the highest-priority action
  5. Pack cabin bag essentials — for Lanzarote/Fuerteventura especially, assume bags may not travel with you
  6. If your flight is cancelled: demand full cash refund OR rebooking — no compensation is owed but refund/rebooking is always your right
  7. At the airport if delayed: ask for meal vouchers immediately — push back if refused, keep all receipts

The dispute is not close to resolution. Similar disputes in 2023 and 2024 were only resolved after several weeks of rolling cancellations. Plan your trip accordingly.


Related Articles:


Latest News



Sources: Euro Weekly News, The Local Spain, The Olive Press, Canarian Weekly, Gazette Life (Lanzarote),  SafeAbroad, StrikeTracker Spain, EU Regulation 261/2004, UK Package Travel Regulations 2018, UK Civil Aviation Authority — April 15, 2026

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.