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Ryanair brings forward airport bag-drop closure as EU Entry/Exit System slows queues

Apr 24, 2026
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Ryanair brings forward airport bag-drop closure as EU Entry/Exit System slows queues
Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair will shut its airport check-in and bag-drop desks 60 minutes before scheduled departure—20 minutes earlier than the current cut-off—from 10 November 2026. Announcing the change on 23 April, the airline said the tweak is needed to give passengers "more breathing space" to navigate longer security and passport queues triggered by the EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES). EES became fully operational on 10 April across all Schengen external borders. Although Ireland is not in Schengen, the majority of Ryanair’s 3,300-plus weekly flights operate to continental Europe; any delay at foreign outbound airports can cascade across its network. In recent weeks, passengers in Milan, Lisbon and Palma have reported hour-long queues at biometric kiosks, with some missing connections. By tightening cut-off times, Ryanair hopes to cut the proportion of customers who are still in security when final boarding is called—currently around 2 per cent, according to the airline.

From a global-mobility perspective, the policy shift matters because Ryanair is often the only nonstop or same-day option between many Irish regional airports and secondary European business hubs.

Ryanair brings forward airport bag-drop closure as EU Entry/Exit System slows queues


For companies and travellers looking to reduce friction amid these new procedures, VisaHQ can provide up-to-date guidance on visa, passport and biometric entry rules worldwide. Their Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) lets users check documentation requirements for every Ryanair destination in minutes, ensuring assignees and commuters have the right papers before they even arrive at the airport.

Assignees who travel with hold luggage—particularly commuters on weekly rotations—will need to arrive earlier or switch to online check-in and cabin-bag only tickets. Mobility teams should update travel policy templates and booking-tool prompts to reflect the new 60-minute rule well ahead of the winter-schedule cut-over. The move also underscores wider operational stress caused by EES. Airport councils and airline associations are already lobbying Brussels for a grace period that would allow manual stamping during peak waves until biometric hardware and staffing are fully bedded in. If that relief fails to materialise, other carriers may copy Ryanair’s lead by extending check-in deadlines or even rescheduling first-wave departures to off-peak slots—a ripple effect that corporate travel managers will need to track closely over the summer.

Irish Visas & Immigration Team @ VisaHQ

VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.

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