IB

Iberia Strike — Claim up to €600 Compensation

Flight delayed or cancelled due to a Iberia strike? You may be entitled to compensation under EU Regulation 261/2004.

Check your compensation
32
Delays
0
Cancellations
5h 11m
Avg. Delay
€17,050
Total Compensation

Current Status

Warning
Thursday, 26 February 2026

Nationwide strikes to disrupt air and rail travel in Italy this week.

Flight delayed or cancelled due to a Iberia strike?
Check in 2 minutes if you're entitled to compensation.
Check my compensation

When are you entitled to compensation during a Iberia strike?

Under EU Regulation 261/2004, passengers are entitled to compensation for delays exceeding 3 hours or cancellations of flights departing from the EU. The key question during strikes is: is the strike an "extraordinary circumstance"?

The European Court of Justice ruled in Case C-175/17 (17 April 2018) — the so-called "wildcat strike" case — that a strike by the airline's own staff is NOT an extraordinary circumstance. This means Iberia must pay compensation when the strike is carried out by its own pilots, cabin crew, or ground staff.

When you ARE entitled to compensation:

  • Strike by Iberia pilots → compensation required
  • Strike by Iberia cabin crew → compensation required
  • Strike by Iberia ground staff → compensation required
  • "Wildcat" strikes (spontaneous actions) → compensation required (ECJ C-175/17)

When you are NOT entitled to compensation:

  • Air traffic control (ATC) strike → extraordinary circumstance
  • Airport staff strike (not Iberia) → extraordinary circumstance
  • General national strikes → extraordinary circumstance

Compensation Amounts

€250
< 1.500 km
per person
€400
1.500 — 3.500 km
per person
€600
> 3.500 km
per person

Iberia Strike History & Unions

Iberia is based in Spain with main hub(s): MAD. The following unions are active at Iberia:

  • SEPLA (pilots)
  • USO
  • CCOO

During previous Iberia strikes, flights via MAD were primarily affected. Iberia is obligated to actively inform affected passengers about their rights under EU261, including the right to compensation, rebooking, or refund.

FlyClaim.AI continuously monitors all Iberia flights and immediately alerts when strike actions affect your flight.

What to do during a Iberia strike?

  1. Keep all your documents — Boarding pass, booking confirmation, e-tickets, and all communication from Iberia.
  2. Request written confirmation — Ask Iberia for a written statement of the reason for the delay or cancellation.
  3. Document additional costs — Keep receipts for meals, hotel, transport, and other expenses incurred due to the strike.
  4. Check your compensation — Use the FlyClaim calculator to instantly check how much compensation you can claim.
  5. File your claim — FlyClaim.AI automatically sends a legal notice to Iberia. The airline has 6 weeks to respond.

How long can you file a claim?

The deadline for filing a compensation claim varies by country:

  • Netherlands: 3 years
  • Germany: 3 years
  • France: 5 years
  • United Kingdom: 6 years
  • Spain: 5 years
  • Belgium: 1 year
  • Italy: 2 years

Important: Don't wait too long to file your claim. The sooner you act, the stronger your position.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, if the strike is by Iberia staff (pilots, cabin crew, ground staff), this is NOT an extraordinary circumstance according to the European Court of Justice (Case C-175/17). You are entitled to €250–€600 compensation under EU Regulation 261/2004.

Recent Iberia flights

Flight delayed or cancelled due to a Iberia strike?

Check in 2 minutes if you're entitled to compensation.

Check my compensation