
Passengers across Spain faced a bruising start to the Three Kings holiday after Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas, Barcelona-El Prat, Málaga-Costa del Sol, Valencia and Bilbao recorded a combined 56 cancellations and 886 delays on 6 January.
According to real-time data compiled by FlightAware and reported by Travel and Tour World, Madrid suffered the highest number of delays (315) while Barcelona led cancellations (21). KLM topped the cancellation table with 23 scrapped rotations nationwide, followed by Vueling (16) and Iberia (5). Ryanair registered the largest delay tally, with nearly 200 late departures.
The knock-on effects were felt throughout short-haul European networks, with missed connections and crew-rostering problems cascading into the afternoon peak. Business travellers reported queue times of up to 90 minutes at security in Madrid and Barcelona as ground-handling teams struggled to re-slot aircraft.
In this context, travellers scrambling to adjust itineraries should also make sure their documentation is airtight. VisaHQ’s easy-to-use platform (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) offers real-time visa and passport guidance for Spain and dozens of other destinations, so passengers can sidestep paperwork surprises that might compound already stressful delays.
Air-operations analysts blamed a perfect storm of winter-weather diversions over northern Europe, residual staffing shortages at handling agents and teething problems linked to the new EU Entry/Exit System (EES), which adds biometric capture time for non-EU passengers.
For mobility managers, the incident underscores the value of real-time flight-tracking tools and flexible hotel budgets during Spain’s busy January return-travel window. Companies are urged to advise staff to check airline apps regularly, keep boarding passes handy for automatic EES kiosks and allow extra time for connections through Spanish hubs this week.
According to real-time data compiled by FlightAware and reported by Travel and Tour World, Madrid suffered the highest number of delays (315) while Barcelona led cancellations (21). KLM topped the cancellation table with 23 scrapped rotations nationwide, followed by Vueling (16) and Iberia (5). Ryanair registered the largest delay tally, with nearly 200 late departures.
The knock-on effects were felt throughout short-haul European networks, with missed connections and crew-rostering problems cascading into the afternoon peak. Business travellers reported queue times of up to 90 minutes at security in Madrid and Barcelona as ground-handling teams struggled to re-slot aircraft.
In this context, travellers scrambling to adjust itineraries should also make sure their documentation is airtight. VisaHQ’s easy-to-use platform (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) offers real-time visa and passport guidance for Spain and dozens of other destinations, so passengers can sidestep paperwork surprises that might compound already stressful delays.
Air-operations analysts blamed a perfect storm of winter-weather diversions over northern Europe, residual staffing shortages at handling agents and teething problems linked to the new EU Entry/Exit System (EES), which adds biometric capture time for non-EU passengers.
For mobility managers, the incident underscores the value of real-time flight-tracking tools and flexible hotel budgets during Spain’s busy January return-travel window. Companies are urged to advise staff to check airline apps regularly, keep boarding passes handy for automatic EES kiosks and allow extra time for connections through Spanish hubs this week.









