Wage talks stall at Budapest Airport, strike on the horizon

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Budapest Airport, the operator of Liszt Ferenc International Airport, is facing potential labour unrest as negotiations over wage increases for 2025 have stalled. Despite the company’s record-breaking performance in 2024 and a profit of HUF 30 billion (EUR 75 million) for 2023, management has offered only a 4% pay raise to most physical workers.

According to Szabad Európa, the Airport Workers’ and Service Providers’ Union (Repülőtéri Dolgozók és Szolgáltatók Szakszervezete) has engaged in four rounds of unsuccessful negotiations with Budapest Airport, which is now 80% state-owned. The union is pushing for a 10% wage increase, arguing that the proposed 4% raise barely covers the expected inflation rate for 2025.

Budapest Airport wage negotiations strike (1)
Dissatisfied with wage negotiations, workers at Budapest Airport are considering a strike. Photo: Facebook/Budapest Airport

Record-breaking profits, low pay raise offer

Budapest Airport’s workforce is divided into four main salary categories, with Level I representing managers, and Levels II and III encompassing physical workers and their supervisors. The airport employs various specialised teams, including general maintenance, high-voltage system maintenance, navigation systems, and security personnel.

While Level II and III workers are being offered the 4% raise, employees of the Airport Fuel Service Ltd. (Repülőtéri Üzemanyag Kiszolgáló Kft.) have been offered a 10% increase. However, these workers reportedly earn about a third less than those in Level III positions, Szabad Európa writes. Level III salaries currently range from HUF 700,000 to 900,000 (EUR 1,745 to 2,245) gross per month, with additional bonuses that have remained unchanged since 2018.

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