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Oct 29, 2025

Gran Canaria Airport Becomes First in Spain to Switch On ‘Smart Border’ EES Gates

Gran Canaria Airport Becomes First in Spain to Switch On ‘Smart Border’ EES Gates
The Canary Islands took a major digital-border leap on 29 October when Gran Canaria Airport officially inaugurated Spain’s first fully-operational Entry/Exit System (EES) smart gates. Jesús María Gómez Martín, the archipelago’s chief of police, cut the ribbon at Terminal 1, flanked by officials from the EU agency eu-LISA and airport operator Aena.

Dozens of e-gates now record the facial image and four fingerprints of every non-EU short-stay traveller and automatically calculate permitted days in the Schengen Area. The installation is part of an €83 million national programme to retrofit all Spanish external border points ahead of the EU-wide deadline. The Canary Islands—Spain’s southernmost frontier and a major hub for flights from Africa and the Americas—were chosen as a pilot because the airport already processes more than 1.3 million third-country arrivals annually.

Officials say early data show average border-queue times fell from 18 to 11 minutes during a soft-launch earlier this month. Airlines operating long-haul services, especially to Latin America, welcomed the change, noting that faster connections improve on-time performance and reduce missed onward flights in Madrid and Barcelona.

For corporate mobility managers, the new gates require travellers to remove hats and glasses and place index fingers on a scanner; those unwilling or unable can still opt for a staffed desk, albeit with longer waits. Companies relocating staff to the Canary Islands’ growing tech-outsourcing sector should update arrival briefings and encourage enrolment in Spain’s Pass-Automático programme, which links frequent-traveller passports to the biometric kiosks for even faster clearance.

Gran Canaria’s rollout will be followed by Tenerife Sur in December and Palma de Mallorca in mid-November. National Police technicians say lessons learned in the Canaries—particularly around cruise-ship peaks—will feed into procedures for mainland airports before Spain’s nationwide EES go-live in early February.
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