Daisyray2018
New Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- 19th May 2018 - Sarria to Santiago
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Thanks for the information - all these last minute questions ....eishSorry I can’t answer your questions because I haven’t made a connecting flight at Madrid. A lot will be depend on whether you are changing airlines and also which arrival terminal and which departure terminal.
If you haven’t already found it, this link has some useful info about making connections at Madrid airport.
http://www.aeropuertomadrid-barajas.com/eng/flight-connections.htm
All the best and buen camino.
Thanks all - I contacted Iberia Airline and they assured me they did the booking to give me sufficient time to get my connection - I can only hope they are correct.For people entering the EU / Schengen Zone for the first time, if you are making a direct flight connection at Madrid, your luggage should go automatically to Vigo. In the EU, people are cleared at passport control at the first place of landing (Madrid), and their luggage is cleared through customs at the final flight arrival destination (Vigo).
So, when I fly from the US to Santiago, via Madrid, I go through passport control at Madrid. Then I have to go through airline security again, before they permit me to proceed to my onward connecting flight to Santiago. Once I arrive at Santiago, I must proceed to a special baggage carousel for people like me, just arriving in the EU / Schengen Zone. Our bags are checked by customs officials there.
This contrasts with other countries, like the US, where everything is done at the first port of arrival, regardless of your connections.
All considered, I do NOT think you have enough time. I say this for two reasons.
1. Madrid Barajas airport is HUGE. Depending on connecting gates and terminals (there are four separate terminals), just getting from one gate to another could easily consume all your time.
2. Getting off the plane and through passport control might only take 10 - 15 minutes, as you must walk a long way to passport control.
3. Then you have to wait on line for security screening.
4. Then, you might have to wait for the underground tram (terminal 4 > 4S), or walk quite a distance to your connecting flight.
A clear example is my travel to Santiago when I travel from my home in Florida to Santiago. I try to fly Iberia, as (IMHO) it offers the best value for price and easiest connections.
Even with that home field advantage, getting from the arrival gate in T4, through passport control, wait in line for another security screening, then on the underground train to the satellite terminal (T4S), then walking the better part of a kilometer in the satellite terminal to find my departure gate takes at least 45 minutes. And I walk FAST making full use of moving walkways and every shortcut I am away of.
Personally, having learned my lesson, I try to schedule a minimum two-hour connection at Barajas, just so I can freshen up in the restroom and have a decent cup of coffee and a croissant in the morning when I arrive.
This usually works heading over. But two weeks ago, coming home, I literally had to jog between connections, all in Terminal 4, going through departure passport control (WHAT a conga line!) and just made my departure gate...no coffee.
Hope this helps.
An assurance from an airline...they assured me they did the booking to give me sufficient time to get my connection
Absolutely....Fingers crossed. Wear comfortable walking running shoes, and do NOT have too much carry-on the tote through the airport. Remember, you will have to pass through security again... NO LIQUIDS.
It sounds like your flights are all one one ticket. That means that the airline has the responsibility to get you to your final destination. The EU has stricter rules for what the airline has to provide in case of delay, such as a hotel and meals if your flight is delayed overnight. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_Compensation_Regulation_261/2004Thanks all - I contacted Iberia Airline and they assured me they did the booking to give me sufficient time to get my connection - I can only hope they are correct.
This will so help - I will definitely get one of their people to get me through as I do have a through ticket to Vigo.I advise announcing yourself to the first Iberia person you see coming off the arrival flight into Madrid. Show them you flight itinerary. Let them help you get where you are going.
Trecile is correct that EU rules are tighter, with additional support for passenger rights. The airline must get you to your destination. But they can still take their time doing it. You are trying to start off with minimal drama by making the connection.
Let Iberia assume part of that responsibility. Who knows, they may send you over in an electric cart or know some other shortcut...or not. But nothing ventured, nothing gained.
Hope this helps.
For people entering the EU / Schengen Zone for the first time, if you are making a direct flight connection at Madrid, your luggage should go automatically to Vigo. In the EU, people are cleared at passport control at the first place of landing (Madrid), and their luggage is cleared through customs at the final flight arrival destination (Vigo).
So, when I fly from the US to Santiago, via Madrid, I go through passport control at Madrid. Then I have to go through airline security again, before they permit me to proceed to my onward connecting flight to Santiago. Once I arrive at Santiago, I must proceed to a special baggage carousel for people like me, just arriving in the EU / Schengen Zone. Our bags are checked by customs officials there.
This contrasts with other countries, like the US, where everything is done at the first port of arrival, regardless of your connections.
All considered, I do NOT think you have enough time. I say this for two reasons.
1. Madrid Barajas airport is HUGE. Depending on connecting gates and terminals (there are four separate terminals), just getting from one gate to another could easily consume all your time.
2. Getting off the plane and through passport control might only take 10 - 15 minutes, as you must walk a long way to passport control.
3. Then you have to wait on line for security screening.
4. Then, you might have to wait for the underground tram (terminal 4 > 4S), or walk quite a distance to your connecting flight.
A clear example is my travel to Santiago when I travel from my home in Florida to Santiago. I try to fly Iberia, as (IMHO) it offers the best value for price and easiest connections.
Even with that home field advantage, getting from the arrival gate in T4, through passport control, wait in line for another security screening, then on the underground train to the satellite terminal (T4S), then walking the better part of a kilometer in the satellite terminal to find my departure gate takes at least 45 minutes. And I walk FAST making full use of moving walkways and every shortcut I am aware of.
Personally, having learned my lesson, I try to schedule a minimum two-hour connection at Barajas, just so I can freshen up in the restroom and have a decent cup of coffee and a croissant in the morning when I arrive.
This usually works heading over. But two weeks ago, coming home, I literally had to jog between connections, all in Terminal 4, going through departure passport control (WHAT a conga line!) and just made my departure gate...no coffee.
Hope this helps.
I am travelling in August from Chicago to Madrid then on to Pamplona. I am coming in to Madrid at 7:25 am and I am going to book a 9:55 flight out to Pamplona. On the return from Santiago to Madrid am going to book a 7 o'clock flight to Madrid then a 11:35 flight to Chicago.
I think this will work based on your information. Thanks
I am travelling in August from Chicago to Madrid then on to Pamplona. I am coming in to Madrid at 7:25 am and I am going to book a 9:55 flight out to Pamplona. On the return from Santiago to Madrid am going to book a 7 o'clock flight to Madrid then a 11:35 flight to Chicago.
I think this will work based on your information. Thanks
I guess I should have been more specific. I am flying Iberia on all flights and as multi city.Hi, Susan,
Like @trecile and a few others always advise, you are taking a risk here. What you say sounds like you will have at least two different tickets, a RT to Chicago and then a ticket from Madrid to Pamplona, and one from Santiago to Madrid. If that is the case, and if your first flight in either direction is late, you will lose the second ticket. That’s not such a big deal in the case of the Madrid to Pamplona flight, but if you arrive late for the flight to Chicago, you will both lose your return ticket and have to buy a same day one way ticket. I saw that happen two years ago, and the poor young woman was catatonic. She missed her flight from Madrid because her flight to Madrid from Greece was late.
If you haven’t bought the ticket yet, you should check into the multi-city options. I always fly from Chicago,too, and I can tell you that my ticket last year from Chicago - Madrid-Almeria and the return from Santiago-Madrid -Chicago was not much more than the round trip ticket from Chicago to Madrid. I always fly Iberia, which makes it easy to connect. And having it all on one ticket means that the airline will just rebook me if I miss a connection. I have missed a couple of morning connections in Madrid but I have also made some,so it is just the luck of the draw. For your return, if you are flying on Iberia to Madrid from Santiago, you have a much better chance of making the connection than if you fly on one of the other airlines because they all land in a different terminal.
Good luck with this, the travel part is not the most fun part of the camino, but the anticipation and the adrenaline will keep you going across the ocean! Buen camino, Laurie
I guess I should have been more specific. I am flying Iberia on all flights and as multi city.
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