Air travelers across Italy face a fresh wave of disruption on Saturday, June 13, 2026, as an 18-hour easyJet walkout coincides with air traffic control and ground-handling strikes at several key airports, including Verona and Milan Linate.

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Italy Aviation Strike on June 13 to Hit easyJet and Key Airports

Coordinated Industrial Action Set for June 13

According to published strike calendars and national media coverage, June 13 has emerged as one of the most disruptive aviation strike days in Italy so far this year. The date combines a nationwide walkout by easyJet crews operating in Italy with localized industrial action affecting air traffic control services at Verona and ground operations at Milan Linate.

Reports indicate that the easyJet strike will last for 18 hours, from 06:00 to 24:00 local time, aligning with the same time window announced for the Verona air traffic control stoppage. Ground-handling staff at other airports, including Milan Linate and Cagliari, are also expected to stop work for several hours during the day, amplifying the impact on the wider network.

Italy’s transport sector has already seen a dense calendar of strikes in 2026, ranging from rail walkouts to earlier aviation protests. Travel advisory services note that the June 13 actions continue a pattern of targeted, sector-specific stoppages that can heavily disrupt individual carriers and airports even in the absence of a nationwide shutdown.

easyJet Walkout: Scope, Timing and Potential Cancellations

Publicly available information from Italian news outlets and aviation-focused publications shows that the easyJet action will involve pilots and cabin crew based in Italy. The strike has been scheduled from 06:00 to 24:00 on June 13, effectively covering the bulk of the carrier’s daily schedule on Italian routes.

Travel industry reports suggest that a significant number of easyJet flights to, from and within Italy may be affected, with cancellations and substantial delays expected across the day. The precise list of flights at risk has been evolving in the run-up to the walkout, as the airline adjusts operations, consolidates services and seeks to protect priority connections.

Passenger-rights agencies in Europe have highlighted that walkouts by airline staff can trigger obligations for carriers to assist affected travelers. Where flights are cancelled or subject to long delays, passengers may be entitled to rerouting, reimbursement and care such as meals and accommodation, although compensation rules depend on the specific circumstances and applicable regulations.

Industry observers advise travelers booked on easyJet services on June 13 to monitor their booking closely, use the airline’s digital tools to track schedule changes and consider allowing additional time for airport formalities, even if their specific flight remains scheduled to operate.

Verona ATC Strike to Disrupt Northern Italy Flows

The strike by air traffic control personnel at Verona airport is scheduled for the same 18-hour window as the easyJet action, from 06:00 to 24:00 on June 13. Information referenced by specialist aviation media attributes the stoppage to staff of Italy’s air navigation service provider working at the Verona facility.

Because air traffic control is central to airport operations, a prolonged walkout at Verona is expected to trigger cancellations, delays and possible diversions. While minimum essential services are typically maintained under Italian strike rules to protect safety and certain guaranteed flights, capacity is likely to be significantly reduced for most of the day.

Verona is an important gateway for both domestic routes and seasonal leisure traffic to northern Italy’s lakes and nearby cities. Disruptions there can therefore ripple through wider airline networks, affecting rotations and aircraft availability for later flights in the day or on subsequent days.

Travel advisories recommend that passengers planning to depart from or arrive at Verona on June 13 check their flight status frequently and be prepared for last-minute schedule adjustments. Some airlines may reroute passengers via other northern Italian airports or consolidate flights to limit the impact.

Milan Linate Ground-Handling Stop Raises Operational Risks

In Milan, the focus on June 13 falls on Milan Linate, the city’s close-in airport primarily serving domestic and short-haul European routes. Labor action there involves ground-handling staff employed by Sky Service, with a four-hour strike window announced from 12:00 to 16:00 local time.

Coverage in Italian transport news notes that ground-handling stoppages can be particularly disruptive because they affect essential services such as check-in, baggage loading and unloading, aircraft pushback and ramp operations. Even a relatively short walkout may lead to queues, delays and possible cancellations if airlines cannot secure alternative handling arrangements.

Given that the Linate strike overlaps with the broader easyJet and Verona disruptions, analysts expect compounded operational challenges for carriers using the airport, including potential knock-on delays later in the afternoon and evening. Travelers transiting through Milan or relying on tight connections may be especially vulnerable to schedule changes.

Passengers are being encouraged by travel advisers to arrive early at Linate on June 13, avoid checking in baggage if possible and keep digital boarding passes and airline apps handy in case of gate changes or last-minute retimings.

What Travelers Should Expect and How to Prepare

With multiple layers of industrial action converging on June 13, passengers flying in Italy that day should plan for a higher-than-normal risk of disruption, even if their airline or airport is not directly targeted. Air traffic control constraints at Verona, reduced ground capacity at Milan Linate and widespread easyJet cancellations can all create secondary effects elsewhere in the system.

Travel information services advise that one of the most effective preparations is to verify flight status repeatedly in the 24 hours before departure and again on the way to the airport. Many airlines update schedules in waves as operational plans evolve, and a flight shown as on time in the morning may change later in the day.

Experts on passenger rights suggest that travelers keep records of any notifications received from airlines and retain receipts for additional expenses incurred due to disruptions, such as meals or alternative transport. These records can support later claims under airline policies or regional passenger-protection rules, where applicable.

For visitors on tight itineraries or with critical onward connections, some travel planners recommend considering adjustments where feasible, such as moving nonessential journeys away from June 13 or allowing larger buffers between flights and other transport. While not all itineraries can be changed, a modest shift in timing may reduce exposure to the most intense hours of disruption.