
France’s largest air-traffic-controller union, the SNCTA, confirmed on 11 May that it will stage a three-day national strike from Thursday 14 to Saturday 16 May—coinciding with the Ascension Day long weekend, traditionally one of the busiest periods for domestic leisure and short-haul business trips. The walk-out notice, covering all civil aviation control centres and airport towers, raises the prospect of widespread flight cancellations or re-routing at Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle, Orly, Lyon, Nice and Marseille. The Directorate-General for Civil Aviation (DGAC) typically requests carriers to trim schedules proactively when staffing falls below safe levels. In previous SNCTA stoppages, reductions of 20–35 % of planned movements were common, but peak-period strikes—in April 2025, for example—saw up to 75 % of slots cut at Orly. Low-cost and regional airlines bear the brunt because priority is given to intercontinental and “lifeline” flights to overseas territories. For corporate mobility teams the timing is awkward. Thursday flights are favoured by consultants and project teams aiming to combine client work with a long weekend, and many French firms had already scheduled post-budget-season roadshows. Rail alternatives will be stretched: SNCF has limited spare capacity after recent rolling-stock redeployments and may not absorb the full spill-over.
While the immediate concern is seat availability, travellers who need to reroute through non-Schengen hubs or schedule emergency trips once the strike lifts should also double-check entry requirements. VisaHQ’s platform (https://www.visahq.com/france/) can validate documentation and obtain any necessary transit visas in a matter of hours, giving mobility teams one less variable to worry about when creating back-up itineraries.
Companies are therefore advising travellers either to advance departures to Wednesday evening or switch to virtual meetings. Multinational groups with production sites in the French provinces are dusting off contingency plans that include chartering buses or booking block seats on high-speed trains. Logistics managers warn that European supply chains relying on just-in-time air cargo into CDG could be disrupted, particularly for pharmaceuticals and critical auto parts. Although last-minute conciliation sometimes averts a strike, SNCTA negotiators say that talks over workload and staffing ratios remain stalled. Even if action is lifted, the uncertainty itself imposes costs: airlines are obliged under EU261 to offer re-booking or refunds, and many passengers will have deferred bookings. Mobility professionals should therefore treat the next 48 hours as a “critical watch window” and keep travellers informed of fallback options.
While the immediate concern is seat availability, travellers who need to reroute through non-Schengen hubs or schedule emergency trips once the strike lifts should also double-check entry requirements. VisaHQ’s platform (https://www.visahq.com/france/) can validate documentation and obtain any necessary transit visas in a matter of hours, giving mobility teams one less variable to worry about when creating back-up itineraries.
Companies are therefore advising travellers either to advance departures to Wednesday evening or switch to virtual meetings. Multinational groups with production sites in the French provinces are dusting off contingency plans that include chartering buses or booking block seats on high-speed trains. Logistics managers warn that European supply chains relying on just-in-time air cargo into CDG could be disrupted, particularly for pharmaceuticals and critical auto parts. Although last-minute conciliation sometimes averts a strike, SNCTA negotiators say that talks over workload and staffing ratios remain stalled. Even if action is lifted, the uncertainty itself imposes costs: airlines are obliged under EU261 to offer re-booking or refunds, and many passengers will have deferred bookings. Mobility professionals should therefore treat the next 48 hours as a “critical watch window” and keep travellers informed of fallback options.
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