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Dec 28, 2025

Holiday strikes threaten fresh wave of flight delays at Italian airports

Holiday strikes threaten fresh wave of flight delays at Italian airports
Italian travellers may swap Christmas cheer for terminal queues as a new round of airport strikes looms over the busy festive period. Turin daily CronacaQui reports that ground-handling crews and cabin staff in the UK, Spain **and Italy** have already staged walk-outs, with Italy’s main disruption pencilled in for 9 January. Union CUB Trasporti has called a four-hour nationwide action (13:00–17:00) covering ramp agents, check-in staff and security screeners. Separately, Swissport Italia workers at Milan-Linate will down tools for 24 hours the same day.

Although statutory “guaranteed service” bands protect early-morning and evening flights, mid-day rotations used heavily by business travellers are at risk. ENAC has asked airlines to file revised schedules by 3 January so that passengers can be re-protected in advance. The walk-outs follow a wave of wage-inflation disputes: baggage-handlers argue that 2024’s six-per-cent cost-of-living adjustment was wiped out by inflation running above eight per cent in Milan and Rome.

Should unexpected rerouting or extended layovers require additional travel documentation—say, a transit visa for a non-EU hub—VisaHQ can step in quickly. Through its dedicated Italy portal (https://www.visahq.com/italy/), travellers and corporate mobility teams can upload passports, track processing in real time and arrange expedited courier pickup, streamlining the paperwork so passengers can focus on navigating strike-related schedule changes.

Holiday strikes threaten fresh wave of flight delays at Italian airports


Although statutory “guaranteed service” bands protect early-morning and evening flights, mid-day rotations used heavily by business travellers are at risk. ENAC has asked airlines to file revised schedules by 3 January so that passengers can be re-protected in advance. The walk-outs follow a wave of wage-inflation disputes: baggage-handlers argue that 2024’s six-per-cent cost-of-living adjustment was wiped out by inflation running above eight per cent in Milan and Rome.

Down-line disruption could persist well into January. Enav air-traffic-control staff in Verona have announced a 31 January protest, while handling crews in Bologna and Venice are balloting for coordinated action unless pay talks progress. Ryanair and ITA Airways say they will offer free date-changes for flights touching affected airports between 8 and 10 January.

For corporates, the lesson is clear: build redundancy into travel itineraries by booking fully flexible fares, alert employees to check-in online the night before, and consider rail alternatives on trunk routes such as Milan–Rome, where high-speed trains cover the journey in under three hours. Mobility managers should also remind staff that EU261/2004 compensation does **not** apply to strikes deemed ‘extraordinary circumstances’, meaning companies must foot the bill for hotels or re-routing if employee policies require duty-of-care coverage.
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