Good News for Easter Saturday Flights: A Clean Day at Spanish Airports
Published: April 4, 2026 (Easter Saturday)
Today’s Strike Status: ✅ NO STRIKE — Easter Saturday is not a Groundforce strike day
Menzies Status: ✅ DEAL IN PLACE — no Menzies action through end of April
Easter Sunday April 5: ✅ NO STRIKE — Sunday is not a Groundforce strike day
Easter Monday April 6: 🔴 GROUNDFORCE STRIKES — Mon/Wed/Fri pattern resumes at 5AM
Strike Windows April 6: 5–7AM | 11AM–5PM | 10PM–midnight
Airports Hit April 6: All 12 Groundforce airports — Madrid, Barcelona, Málaga, Palma, Alicante, Valencia, Bilbao, Ibiza, Gran Canaria, Tenerife Sur, Tenerife Norte, Lanzarote, Fuerteventura
Passengers at Risk Monday: Hundreds of thousands — Easter Monday is the single biggest return travel day of the holiday
The Relief: Why Today Is Different From the Past Five Days
Since Monday, March 30, Spanish airports have faced significant disruptions due to an indefinite strike by Groundforce employees. The situation peaked on Good Friday, April 3, when simultaneous stoppages across 12 airports led to severe delays and stranded baggage. Today, however, is a different story.
Groundforce employees are not striking on Saturdays, which means operations are running smoothly. With the Menzies dispute resolved, today marks the first genuinely low-disruption flying day in Spain since March 26. Passengers can expect:
- Baggage Loading and Unloading: Operating normally
- Aircraft Pushback: Operating normally
- Check-in Staffing: At full Groundforce levels
- Ramp Operations: No skeleton crew, no minimum services order needed
- Boarding Process: Normal speed
- Baggage Reclaim: Normal processing time
The only caveat is the potential for knock-on delays from the chaos of Good Friday, as some aircraft and crew rotations may still be out of sync.
Easter Sunday April 5 — Also a Clean Day
Easter Sunday is similarly clear of disruptions. Groundforce workers will not strike, and the Menzies deal remains in effect. This makes Sunday the cleanest day in the entire Easter 2026 flying window.
Easter Sunday Airport Status:
- ✅ Groundforce — NOT striking
- ✅ Menzies — deal in place, normal operations
- ✅ No active walkouts at any of the 12 affected Spanish airports
However, non-EU passport holders should be aware of the EU Entry/Exit System (EES), which may add 30–60 minutes to queue times at passport control due to biometric data requirements.
EES Advice for Passengers Arriving on Easter Sunday:
- Allow an additional 45–60 minutes after landing for passport control.
- Have your passport ready to speed up processing.
- Avoid tight schedules for car hire or hotel transport.
⚠️ Easter Monday April 6 — The Strike Is Back. This Is the Day to Watch.
Easter Monday is critical for travelers, as it is the largest return travel day of the holiday and a confirmed Groundforce strike day. The strike windows are as follows:
- 🔴 5:00 AM – 7:00 AM: Early morning departures will be severely impacted.
- 🔴 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM: This six-hour window covers the busiest departure peak of the day.
- 🔴 10:00 PM – midnight: Late evening departures will also be affected.
Airports Affected on Easter Monday:
- Madrid-Barajas (MAD)
- Barcelona El Prat (BCN)
- Málaga Costa del Sol (AGP)
- Palma de Mallorca (PMI)
- Alicante Elche (ALC)
- Valencia (VLC)
- Bilbao (BIO)
- Ibiza (IBZ)
- Las Palmas Gran Canaria (LPA)
- Tenerife Sur (TFS)
- Tenerife Norte (TFN)
- Lanzarote (ACE)
- Fuerteventura (FUE)
Airlines Most at Risk:
- Air Europa
- Iberia
- Ryanair
- easyJet
- Vueling
- Jet2
- TUI
Passengers flying on Monday should take advantage of today and tomorrow to prepare, as the risk of disruption is high.
What the Last Five Days Have Looked Like — The Strike’s Real Impact So Far
To understand the significance of Easter Monday, it’s essential to review the disruptions caused by the strike:
- March 30: Groundforce begins indefinite action, leading to immediate disruptions.
- March 31: A clean day with partial recovery.
- April 1: Groundforce strikes again, causing delays and baggage accumulation.
- April 2: Menzies deal confirmed; relative calm ensues.
- April 3: The worst day of the strike, with significant delays affecting multiple airlines.
- April 4: ✅ No strike; clean day.
- April 5: ✅ No strike; clean day.
- April 6: 🔴 Groundforce back; return travel peak.
After Easter: The Strike Continues Through April and Beyond
The Groundforce dispute remains unresolved, with workers set to strike every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday until an agreement is reached. This means ongoing disruption risks for flights at Groundforce-operated airports in Spain.
Confirmed Post-Easter Strike Dates:
- Wednesday, April 8 🔴
- Friday, April 10 🔴 (also when EES goes fully mandatory)
- Monday, April 13 🔴
- Wednesday, April 15 🔴
- Friday, April 17 🔴
- …and every Mon/Wed/Fri until a deal is reached.
If you have flights to or from Spain in April or beyond, check whether your airline uses Groundforce at your departure airport.
The Remaining Easter Risk: EES Border Delays on Top of Everything
Even on clean strike days, the EU Entry/Exit System is causing delays for non-EU passport holders. The EES requires biometric data registration, which can add significant time to passport control queues.
EES Practical Advice for Passengers:
- Allow at least 60 minutes after landing for passport control.
- Have your passport ready to speed up processing.
- Avoid tight schedules for car hire or hotel transport.
What To Do If You Are Flying Easter Monday — 6-Step Action Plan
- Check Your Airline App: Before heading to the airport, check for any delays or gate changes.
- Arrive Early: Plan to arrive 3–4 hours before your flight, especially during the high-risk strike window.
- Travel Carry-On Only: If possible, avoid checked luggage to minimize disruption risks.
- Know Your Rights: Familiarize yourself with EU261 Duty of Care rights regarding delays and cancellations.
- Demand Rebooking or Refund: If your flight is canceled, insist on rebooking or a full cash refund.
- File a Claim After Your Trip: If you believe you’re entitled to compensation, file a claim with the relevant authority.
Quick Reference — Full Spain Strike Calendar to End of April
| Date | Day | Strike? | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 4 | Easter Saturday | ✅ No Groundforce | 🟢 Low |
| Apr 5 | Easter Sunday | ✅ No Groundforce | 🟢 Low |
| Apr 6 | Easter Monday | 🔴 Groundforce | 🔴 Critical |
| Apr 7 | Tuesday | ✅ No Groundforce | 🟢 Low |
| Apr 8 | Wednesday | 🔴 Groundforce | 🟠 High |
| Apr 9 | Thursday | ✅ No Groundforce | 🟢 Low |
| Apr 10 | Friday (EES live) | 🔴 Groundforce | 🔴 Critical |
| Apr 11 | Saturday | ✅ No Groundforce | 🟢 Low |
| Apr 12 | Sunday | ✅ No Groundforce | 🟢 Low |
| Apr 13 | Monday | 🔴 Groundforce | 🟠 High |
| Apr 14 | Tuesday | ✅ No Groundforce | 🟢 Low |
| Apr 15 | Wednesday | 🔴 Groundforce | 🟠 High |
Pattern: Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday is a strike day until a wage deal is reached. Every Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday is strike-free.
The Bottom Line
Easter Saturday, April 4, 2026, is a genuinely clean day at Spanish airports. Groundforce is not striking, and the Menzies deal is holding. For the first time since March 30, millions of passengers can travel to and from Spain without the systemic baggage chaos and delay risk that has defined this Easter week.
Enjoy it — because Easter Monday is coming. April 6 is a Groundforce strike day from 5 AM, coinciding with one of the busiest return travel days of the year. If you are returning to the UK on Monday, arrive at the airport 3–4 hours early, travel carry-on only, and check your airline app before you leave your accommodation.
The Groundforce dispute has no resolution date, meaning every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in April — and potentially every week until December 31, 2026 — carries the same risk. If you are flying to Spain in the weeks after Easter, check your departure date against this calendar before you book.
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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.

