
Belgium’s second-largest passenger gateway, Brussels South Charleroi Airport (CRL), has issued an urgent travel notice ahead of an inter-professional strike planned for Thursday, 5 February. The airport’s bulletin, posted late on 4 February, cautions that road and public-transport links in the Province of Hainaut may face blockades or reduced service, potentially slowing access to the terminal. (brussels-charleroi-airport.com)
Unlike previous national walk-outs that shut down entire flight schedules, this action centres on wage demands in Hainaut’s public-sector unions and does not specifically target aviation. Charleroi’s management therefore intends to keep runways and security lanes open, but it cannot guarantee that passengers, crew or critical suppliers will reach the site on time.
For travellers juggling last-minute schedule changes, making sure visas and other travel documents are in order is just as important as navigating strike disruptions. VisaHQ can help by offering fast online visa checks, application processing and courier services for Belgium and hundreds of other destinations (https://www.visahq.com/belgium/), allowing passengers to concentrate on contingency plans while the paperwork is handled seamlessly.
The timing is awkward for mobility planners: Ryanair has just shifted to 100 % digital boarding passes at CRL, requiring passengers to complete check-in and document verification before arriving at the gate. Any delay at the perimeter could cascade into missed cut-off times for bag drop or document scanning.
Corporate travel managers moving staff through Charleroi on 5 February should arrange door-to-door transfers, advise travellers to leave at least three hours before scheduled departure, and monitor live road-traffic feeds. Employers with time-sensitive cargo should confirm whether freight forwarders have contingency routes bypassing potential picket lines.
The alert also underscores a broader trend: Belgium has recorded 11 regional or national strikes since the start of 2025, many announced at short notice. Companies with high-volume shuttle programmes between Wallonia and EU headquarters in Brussels may wish to incorporate strike clauses into travel insurance and service-level agreements.
Unlike previous national walk-outs that shut down entire flight schedules, this action centres on wage demands in Hainaut’s public-sector unions and does not specifically target aviation. Charleroi’s management therefore intends to keep runways and security lanes open, but it cannot guarantee that passengers, crew or critical suppliers will reach the site on time.
For travellers juggling last-minute schedule changes, making sure visas and other travel documents are in order is just as important as navigating strike disruptions. VisaHQ can help by offering fast online visa checks, application processing and courier services for Belgium and hundreds of other destinations (https://www.visahq.com/belgium/), allowing passengers to concentrate on contingency plans while the paperwork is handled seamlessly.
The timing is awkward for mobility planners: Ryanair has just shifted to 100 % digital boarding passes at CRL, requiring passengers to complete check-in and document verification before arriving at the gate. Any delay at the perimeter could cascade into missed cut-off times for bag drop or document scanning.
Corporate travel managers moving staff through Charleroi on 5 February should arrange door-to-door transfers, advise travellers to leave at least three hours before scheduled departure, and monitor live road-traffic feeds. Employers with time-sensitive cargo should confirm whether freight forwarders have contingency routes bypassing potential picket lines.
The alert also underscores a broader trend: Belgium has recorded 11 regional or national strikes since the start of 2025, many announced at short notice. Companies with high-volume shuttle programmes between Wallonia and EU headquarters in Brussels may wish to incorporate strike clauses into travel insurance and service-level agreements.









