🚨 Spain Easter Strike Day 5, March 31: Groundforce Wednesday TOMORROW, Menzies 24-Hour Strike Begins THURSDAY April 2 β€” Double Strike CRITICAL DAYS Are Good Friday April 3 + Easter Monday April 6, 1.34 Million Passengers at Risk, UK FCDO Issues EES Border Warning, Wages Frozen Since 2022, LAST CHANCE to Rebook Before the Worst Days Begin

Published on : 31 Mar 2026

🚨 Spain Easter Strike Day 5, March 31: Groundforce Wednesday TOMORROW, Menzies 24-Hour Strike Begins THURSDAY April 2 β€” Double Strike CRITICAL DAYS Are Good Friday April 3 + Easter Monday April 6, 1.34 Million Passengers at Risk, UK FCDO Issues EES Border Warning, Wages Frozen Since 2022, LAST CHANCE to Rebook Before the Worst Days Begin

FINAL COUNTDOWN β€” Tuesday March 31: If you have a Spain Easter flight booked for Thursday April 2, Friday April 3, Saturday April 4, Sunday April 5 or Monday April 6 β€” today may be your last practical window to rebook before the most disruptive days of the entire Easter strike crisis.

In two days, on Thursday April 2, the Menzies 24-hour full strike begins. Unlike Groundforce’s staggered 3-window approach, the Menzies action is a complete 24-hour stoppage at 7 major airports β€” running from midnight to midnight, every day from April 2 through April 6. And because Groundforce simultaneously strikes on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, Good Friday April 3 and Easter Monday April 6 will see both Groundforce AND Menzies striking simultaneously at 12 airports.

The disruption will reach a critical peak on Good Friday, April 3, and Easter Monday, April 6, when both companies strike simultaneously. The Spanish transport ministry estimates that up to 1.34 million passengers are at risk of flight delays, long check-in queues and baggage chaos.

Three significant new developments since your last Spain strike articles require immediate passenger attention:

First: The FCDO has issued a formal warning advising UK nationals to allow extra time at the Spanish border specifically because the EU Entry/Exit System adds 2–4 hours to passport processing β€” on top of the ground handling strike delays.

Second: The root cause of the strike has been publicly confirmed by unions: Workers are demanding a salary increase and have cited a “loss of purchasing power for the workforce.” Despite rising inflation, ground staff have had their pay frozen since 2022. No deal is in sight.

Third: Over 85% of scheduled flights are still expected to operate β€” the disruption is severe but not a complete shutdown. Passengers who understand the system can navigate it. Those who don’t will face avoidable chaos.


Published: March 31, 2026 (Tuesday β€” Strike Day 5)
TODAY β€” Tuesday March 31: No Groundforce or Menzies strike ← clean day βœ…
TOMORROW β€” Wednesday April 1: πŸ”΄ Groundforce (5–7AM | 11AM–5PM | 10PM–midnight) β€” Day 3
THURSDAY β€” April 2: πŸ”΄πŸ”΄ MENZIES 24-HR BEGINS + Groundforce Wednesday pattern ← CRITICAL
GOOD FRIDAY β€” April 3: πŸ”΄πŸ”΄ DOUBLE STRIKE β€” Groundforce (Fri) + Menzies (Day 2) ← WORST DAY
Saturday April 4: πŸ”΄ Menzies 24-hr (Day 3) β€” Groundforce not striking Saturday

Easter Sunday April 5: πŸ”΄ Menzies 24-hr (Day 4)
Easter Monday April 6: πŸ”΄πŸ”΄ DOUBLE STRIKE β€” Groundforce (Mon) + Menzies (Day 5) ← WORST DAY
Passengers at risk: 1.34 million β€” Spanish transport ministry estimate
Root cause: Wages frozen since 2022 β€” unions demand 7.82% increase, companies applied 4.58%
Workers involved: ~6,000 β€” Groundforce + Menzies combined
Negotiations: SIMA mediation ongoing β€” NO DEAL as of today
Extension risk: If unresolved, strikes could continue to December 31, 2026 including weekends
UK FCDO EES warning: 2–4 additional hours at Spanish border passport control ← NEW
EES full implementation: April 10, 2026 β€” fully operational from next week
85% of flights expected to operate: Yes β€” but with significant delays and baggage disruption


The 10-Day Strike Calendar β€” What Every Day Looks Like

Understanding which days are safe, which are strike-only, and which are double-strike is the single most important piece of information for Spain Easter passengers:

Date Day Strike Status Risk Level
March 31 Tuesday βœ… Clean No disruption
April 1 Wednesday πŸ”΄ Groundforce (3 windows) Moderate
April 2 Thursday πŸ”΄πŸ”΄ Menzies 24-hr BEGINS + Groundforce HIGH
April 3 Good Friday πŸ”΄πŸ”΄ DOUBLE STRIKE β€” both companies CRITICAL ← WORST
April 4 Saturday πŸ”΄ Menzies 24-hr only High
April 5 Easter Sunday πŸ”΄ Menzies 24-hr only High
April 6 Easter Monday πŸ”΄πŸ”΄ DOUBLE STRIKE β€” both companies CRITICAL ← WORST
April 7 Tuesday βœ… Clean No disruption
April 9 Wednesday πŸ”΄ Groundforce (resumes) Moderate
April 11 Friday πŸ”΄ Groundforce Moderate

The two worst days are April 3 (Good Friday) and April 6 (Easter Monday). These are the peak outbound and peak return days of the British Easter holiday season β€” and they are both double-strike days.


The Menzies 24-Hour Strike β€” What It Means in Practice

Unlike Groundforce’s targeted 3-window walkout, the Menzies action is total:

Their strike will apply daily from April 2 to April 6 between 12am and 12pm.

A full 24-hour Menzies strike means their approximately 3,000 workers are entirely absent from these 7 airports for the entire day:

Menzies airports (7): Barcelona El Prat | Palma de Mallorca | Malaga | Alicante | Gran Canaria | Tenerife Sur | Tenerife Norte

The services Menzies provides β€” check-in support, baggage loading and unloading, aircraft refuelling, cleaning, ramp operations, and passenger boarding β€” simply do not happen at their normal pace. Airlines operating at Menzies airports must either:

  • Use their own staff where possible (usually insufficient volume for peak holiday operations)
  • Rely on minimum service skeleton crews ordered by the Spanish government
  • Accept slower operations and downstream delays throughout the day

Menzies Aviation, which services a huge portion of budget and international carriers, has opted for full-day strikes on the core Easter dates. The overlap on Good Friday (April 3) and Easter Monday (April 6) is being described by travel experts as a “perfect storm” for delays, as both Groundforce and Menzies staff may be off the job simultaneously at major hubs.

For UK passengers on Ryanair, easyJet, Jet2 and TUI specifically: These carriers are the heaviest users of Menzies’ services at the 7 Menzies airports. If you are flying one of these carriers to Malaga, Palma, Tenerife or Gran Canaria on April 2–6, your specific flight is in the highest-risk category.


Why This Strike Is Happening β€” The Wage Story

One widely cited point in the dispute is the unions’ claim that pay should have increased by around 7.82%, rather than the 4.58% applied by the company.

Workers are demanding a salary increase and have cited a “loss of purchasing power for the workforce.” Despite rising inflation, ground staff have had their pay frozen since 2022.

The arithmetic of the dispute is clear: Spanish inflation ran at approximately 8.4% in 2022, 3.5% in 2023 and 2.8% in 2024. Groundforce and Menzies applied a 4.58% increase. The unions argue the cumulative shortfall since 2022 represents a meaningful real-terms pay cut for workers who handle aircraft, load bags, and operate ramp vehicles β€” essential roles that cannot be outsourced, offshored or automated.

As one union representative put it: “We are the first ones at the airport and the last to leave, yet we can no longer afford to live in the cities we serve.”

Should no deal be reached, these may continue on a recurring basis up to 31 December, including at weekends.

No agreement has been signed. SIMA mediation is ongoing. The next meaningful negotiation window is likely this week β€” but with Menzies beginning its 5-day full strike in two days, the leverage position shifts dramatically.


The NEW FCDO Warning: EES + Strike = 2–4 Extra Hours

A new development that your previous Spain strike articles did not cover: the UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office has issued formal advice specifically linking the EU Entry/Exit System to additional border delays at Spanish airports.

The FCDO has advised travelers to allow extra time for these additional security checks, which are likely to add 2-4 hours of wait time at busier airports. Passengers should prepare accordingly to avoid missing their flights or connections.

The EU says EES became operational in October 2025 and will be fully operational from 10 April 2026.

What this means for UK passengers specifically:

The EES requires all non-EU nationals β€” including UK citizens since Brexit β€” to register fingerprints and a facial scan at the EU border on their first entry of each 180-day period. This takes 3–8 minutes per passenger at the new e-gate kiosks or border officer desks.

At Madrid, Barcelona and Malaga during the Easter peak, with both ground handling strikes AND EES biometric processing simultaneously:


✈️ Check-in: Slower due to reduced Groundforce/Menzies staffing
✈️ Security: Operating normally β€” not affected by the ground handling strike
✈️ Passport control (arrivals into Spain): EES adding 3–8 minutes per UK passenger
✈️ Baggage reclaim: 60–120 minutes during double-strike periods
✈️ Total airport experience: Potentially 3–5 hours longer than normal

FCDO advice: “Ahead of the Easter holidays, Brits are being advised to be aware of extra border checks… and allow additional time at the border when travelling to the EU.”


The Carriers Most at Risk β€” UK Holiday Operators

UK tourists are advised to: arrive at least 3 hours before their flight; check airline websites/apps for real-time updates; pack essential items including medication and children’s items in hand luggage in case checked bags are delayed.

Ryanair: Largest UK operator to Spain. Heaviest Menzies user at Malaga, Palma, Barcelona. 25-minute turnaround model breaks first when ground handling slows.

easyJet: Major operator to Malaga, Alicante, Palma, Tenerife, Barcelona. Mix of Groundforce and Menzies at different airports.

Jet2: UK’s most popular package holiday operator to Spain β€” Malaga, Palma, Tenerife, Gran Canaria all affected.

TUI (TUI Airways): Package holiday operator β€” customers with pre-booked hotels and transfers face compounded losses if their flight is cancelled or significantly delayed.

British Airways: Madrid and Barcelona routes β€” primarily Groundforce-affected.

Vueling: IAG’s Barcelona-based LCC β€” almost entirely Groundforce-dependent at BCN.


Still Flying to Spain This Easter? 6-Step Survival Guide

βœ… Step 1 β€” TODAY is your last practical chance to rebook. If your flight is April 2–6 and you haven’t changed it, call your airline today. Most carriers β€” Ryanair, easyJet, Jet2, TUI, Iberia β€” have waiver policies allowing free date changes for affected Easter Spain flights.

βœ… Step 2 β€” Know your specific airport’s risk. Flying to Malaga, Palma, Tenerife or Gran Canaria on April 2–6? You are in maximum-risk territory β€” both Groundforce AND Menzies operate at these airports. Flying to Seville, Jerez or Santiago de Compostela? Lower risk β€” primarily Groundforce-only airports, and the Menzies full-day strike doesn’t apply.

βœ… Step 3 β€” Pack medication, children’s essentials and one day’s clothes in your carry-on. ABTA and every aviation consumer organisation in the UK has issued this advice. A spokesman from ABTA: “Passengers should also ensure essential items, such as medication and items for children, are packed in their hand luggage.” Your checked bag may not arrive with you β€” carry what you cannot afford to lose in the cabin.

βœ… Step 4 β€” Arriving UK passengers: allow 2–4 extra hours for EES. If this is your first trip to the EU since October 2025, you will need to register your fingerprints and facial scan at the border. At peak Easter airports, this process can take 30–60 minutes in queue alone.

βœ… Step 5 β€” Know your EU261 rights β€” but don’t count on cash compensation. Because these strikes involve third-party handling companies (Menzies/Groundforce) rather than the airline’s own staff, they are often classified as “Extraordinary Circumstances.” This means you might not be entitled to cash compensation for the delay itself, but the airline still owes you a “Duty of Care” β€” including food vouchers and hotel accommodation if you are stranded overnight. Always claim duty of care. Claim compensation separately and let the CAA adjudicate.

βœ… Step 6 β€” Download your airline app and set push notifications. In 2026, many carriers are using AI-driven rebooking tools that can offer you an alternative flight before you even realize yours has been delayed. Turn on push notifications before you sleep tonight.


Emergency Contacts β€” Strike Week

Airline Contact Waiver Status
Ryanair ryanair.com/manage (app fastest) Active waiver β€” check site
easyJet easyjet.com/manage Active waiver β€” check site
Jet2 0800 408 5591 / jet2.com Active waiver β€” check site
TUI tui.co.uk / 0203 451 2688 Active waiver β€” check site
Iberia +34 901 111 500 / iberia.com Waiver March 27–April 8
British Airways ba.com / 0800 727 800 Check ba.com
Vueling vueling.com Check site
AENA (airport info) aena.es Real-time flight status
UK CAA EU261 caa.co.uk Submit post-trip claims
ABTA helpline abta.com Consumer advice

For More Resources:


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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.

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