
German pilots’ union Vereinigung Cockpit launched a 48-hour strike at 00:01 CET on Thursday, 12 March 2026, grounding roughly half of Lufthansa’s global network. According to the carrier’s special operations page, more than 50 percent of flights system-wide—and 40 percent of short-haul rotations—were cancelled, including multiple frequencies on the busy Prague-Frankfurt and Prague-Munich corridors.
Lufthansa has published a reduced schedule keeping about 60 percent of long-haul services in the air, but Prague-bound corporate travellers face significant knock-on delays as feeder flights mis-connect.
Passengers holding tickets issued on or before 10 March for travel on 12–13 March may rebook free of charge on any Lufthansa Group carrier until 23 March or request a full refund.
To ease onward travel for stranded customers, the airline is again activating its “Rail&Fly” partnership: tickets for cancelled intra-Germany and Germany-to-Prague sectors can be converted into Deutsche Bahn rail coupons at no cost.
Mobility managers should note that the rail option is valid only on the day of issue and the following day, and seat reservations remain subject to availability.
The walk-out is the latest escalation in a wage dispute dating back to 2025. Vereinigung Cockpit is demanding a 12 percent pay rise and improved rostering guarantees, while Lufthansa says its post-pandemic financial recovery cannot absorb such increases.
Václav Havel Airport Prague reported manageable congestion on Thursday morning, as Austrian Airlines and Swiss operated most services and re-accommodated Lufthansa passengers.
Whether you stick to air travel or pivot to rail, make sure visa and transit paperwork keeps pace with your new itinerary. VisaHQ’s Prague portal (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) provides up-to-date Schengen entry guidance and rapid online processing, easing last-minute documentation headaches for travellers suddenly rerouted by the strike.
However, airport authorities urged travellers to check flight status before leaving for the airport and to allow extra time for security checks or rail transfers.
Prague’s main rail hub, Hlavní nádraží, has added staff at the Deutsche Bahn service desk to cope with reissued tickets.
For global mobility teams the strike underscores the importance of multi-modal contingency planning: employers with critical staff movements this week should explore same-day rail links from Prague to Frankfurt (under four hours) or Munich (sub-five hours) to meet long-haul connections.
Travellers heading to the US or Asia via Germany may be able to rebook on Air France-KLM or Turkish Airlines, which still have seats available out of Prague, though peak-period fares have surged 25–40 percent since the strike announcement.
Lufthansa has published a reduced schedule keeping about 60 percent of long-haul services in the air, but Prague-bound corporate travellers face significant knock-on delays as feeder flights mis-connect.
Passengers holding tickets issued on or before 10 March for travel on 12–13 March may rebook free of charge on any Lufthansa Group carrier until 23 March or request a full refund.
To ease onward travel for stranded customers, the airline is again activating its “Rail&Fly” partnership: tickets for cancelled intra-Germany and Germany-to-Prague sectors can be converted into Deutsche Bahn rail coupons at no cost.
Mobility managers should note that the rail option is valid only on the day of issue and the following day, and seat reservations remain subject to availability.
The walk-out is the latest escalation in a wage dispute dating back to 2025. Vereinigung Cockpit is demanding a 12 percent pay rise and improved rostering guarantees, while Lufthansa says its post-pandemic financial recovery cannot absorb such increases.
Václav Havel Airport Prague reported manageable congestion on Thursday morning, as Austrian Airlines and Swiss operated most services and re-accommodated Lufthansa passengers.
Whether you stick to air travel or pivot to rail, make sure visa and transit paperwork keeps pace with your new itinerary. VisaHQ’s Prague portal (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) provides up-to-date Schengen entry guidance and rapid online processing, easing last-minute documentation headaches for travellers suddenly rerouted by the strike.
However, airport authorities urged travellers to check flight status before leaving for the airport and to allow extra time for security checks or rail transfers.
Prague’s main rail hub, Hlavní nádraží, has added staff at the Deutsche Bahn service desk to cope with reissued tickets.
For global mobility teams the strike underscores the importance of multi-modal contingency planning: employers with critical staff movements this week should explore same-day rail links from Prague to Frankfurt (under four hours) or Munich (sub-five hours) to meet long-haul connections.
Travellers heading to the US or Asia via Germany may be able to rebook on Air France-KLM or Turkish Airlines, which still have seats available out of Prague, though peak-period fares have surged 25–40 percent since the strike announcement.
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