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It sounds like more than ample time provided there are no major flight delays getting into Madrid. My wife and I cleared customs there, albeit coming from CDG as our last transit, so we were already on the Schengen side of the airport. But it is a pretty dispersed airport, and so while there might be some small delays in moving baggage and people around, nothing that I think would take up the time you have between flights.Greetings!
I will be flying into Madrid on September 6, 2023, scheduled to arrive at 8:05am on United. What is a reasonable amount of time to allow for baggage claim and clearing customs? I would like to catch an 11:45am flight to Bilbao, but not sure if that allows enough time. Thanks for any help you can offer.
I do need to check in for flight to Bilbao - it's not connected to my flight from US to Madrid.Do you have to check in for your flight to Bilbao or is it all one ticket? Either way, there should be lots of time to deplane, collect luggage, check in and drop off your luggage and have a snack before boarding.
Buen Camino!
Even I, who have been known to overnight rather than chance a connection on a separate ticket, think that’s OKGreetings!
I will be flying into Madrid on September 6, 2023, scheduled to arrive at 8:05am on United. What is a reasonable amount of time to allow for baggage claim and clearing customs? I would like to catch an 11:45am flight to Bilbao, but not sure if that allows enough time. Thanks for any help you can offer.
When I walked the Camino del Norte I had a connecting flight through Madrid to San Sebastian. I flew Iberia to Madrid and had an Iberian Express (may have been Vueling) flight to San Sebastian. The flight was delayed and a 3 1/2 hour window was shrunk down to an hour. I told the flight attendant and she asked my name and flight and told me to see the customer service person waiting at the end of the ramp after we deplaned. She gave me a pass that got me to the front of the line. What probably would have been a 20-30 minute wait as customs was packed. I went out and into 4A and had to go through security again. That too was a long line but the pass got me right through. It is a really long walk through that huge terminal to get to Iberia Express or Vueling gates. Even with the pass when I arrived the plane was almost completely boarded. Without that pass I would have never have made my connection.Greetings!
I will be flying into Madrid on September 6, 2023, scheduled to arrive at 8:05am on United. What is a reasonable amount of time to allow for baggage claim and clearing customs? I would like to catch an 11:45am flight to Bilbao, but not sure if that allows enough time. Thanks for any help you can offer.
I went through customs 2 nights ago, it was at 23:00 and zero line so I breezed through. The lady didn’t even ask me why I was in Madrid or any other question she just stamped my passport and off I went. The line for the taxis was very long and intimidating at first but it moved at lightning speed.Hi everyone - we leave in a week for our Camino. Flying direct from Dulles to Madrid with just our backpacks - I.e. no checked luggage. We were originally booked on an Iberia flight to Pamplona that left at noon, but then Iberia changed the flight to a time that now actually leaves before we land at 0805.So we now have a train ticket from the Atocha station at 1035. Will likely taxi from the airport to the train. We are currently booked in seats close to the front of the plane. Barring a delayed arrival, I am hopeful that we will catch our train.
Any recent travelers into Madrid who can share their immigration timelines?
Thanks and Buen Camino!
Any recent travelers into Madrid who can share their immigration timelines?
Thanks! And enjoy your journey!I went through customs 2 nights ago, it was at 23:00 and zero line so I breezed through. The lady didn’t even ask me why I was in Madrid or any other question she just stamped my passport and off I went. The line for the taxis was very long and intimidating at first but it moved at lightning speed.
I am currently in SJPP trying to sleep with little luck, due to my excitement to begin tomorrow.
Buen Camino!
Thanks!I wouldn’t say this is typical, but this is my experience from September 2022 (I copied it from my journal).
I got off the plane at 6:35 and by 7:15 I had been through immigration, taken the train to the main terminal T4, gone through the vaccination check, taken the commuter train to the Chamartin train station, and was drinking my first cafe con leche.
And I don’t think there’s any vaccination check anymore! Atocha is a few stations beyond Chamartín, but if you’re as lucky as I was, you’ll be fine.
I think that it’s really the luck of the draw with the other international arrivals. If you arrive when several planes are deplaning, you may get really unlucky.
A tip for navigating Madrid airport — take the elevator, not the escalator. Some of the escalators are three stories and take a lot longer than the elevator.
Good luck and keep your fingers crossed!
That’s a good heads up @Camino Joe 2021. As I understand it, there were two main drivers to the implementation of the flat fare. One was the frequent reports of tourists getting ripped off, but the other was that people taking taxis to an airport hotel or to the town of Barajas provided very little fare to the driver if a meter was used. That driver had likely been waiting for an hour or more to pick up a passenger, so I think it‘s a fair way of doing things.The only problem was the taxi driver who over charged for a fare to train station. It is a flat fee, to my knowledge, from airport to train station.
If/when you update us on how it went for you, please let us know how it went with the backpack as well. I vaguely recall someone here saying Iberia is more stringent on backpack carryons than some others.Hi everyone - we leave in a week for our Camino. Flying direct from Dulles to Madrid with just our backpacks - I.e. no checked luggage. We were originally booked on an Iberia flight to Pamplona that left at noon, but then Iberia changed the flight to a time that now actually leaves before we land at 0805.So we now have a train ticket from the Atocha station at 1035. Will likely taxi from the airport to the train. We are currently booked in seats close to the front of the plane. Barring a delayed arrival, I am hopeful that we will catch our train.
Any recent travelers into Madrid who can share their immigration timelines?
Thanks and Buen Camino!
If/when you update us on how it went for you, please let us know how it went with the backpack as well. I vaguely recall someone here saying Iberia is more stringent on backpack carryons than some others.
I've flown Iberia half a dozen times but never with a backpack or any sizable carryon.
EDIT-- sorry I misread and was thinking you were taking Iberia from Dulles and also the flight to Pamplona. If it's just MAD-PNA please still mention how it went if you don't mind.
Thanks! Buen camino!I’m on the Cercanías train right now, May 4, 2023. There was no line at passport control at 19:15 - none.
This is in stark contrast to last May when I arrived at 06:00 and had about an hour wait at passport control.
Good luck!
Bob
On April 5, I arrived at Terminal 4s, cleared customs in seconds and took the shuttle train into 4, where I took a Cercanias train to Chamartin to catch the RENFE intercity train to Zamora where I began my camino. Less than 90 minutes in total to Charmartin. The shuttle train and the many escalators at both ends took about half an hour. Finding my way to the Cercanias train and paying took another 20 minutes. And waiting and taking the Cercanias train about half an hour.Hi everyone - we leave in a week for our Camino. Flying direct from Dulles to Madrid with just our backpacks - I.e. no checked luggage. We were originally booked on an Iberia flight to Pamplona that left at noon, but then Iberia changed the flight to a time that now actually leaves before we land at 0805.So we now have a train ticket from the Atocha station at 1035. Will likely taxi from the airport to the train. We are currently booked in seats close to the front of the plane. Barring a delayed arrival, I am hopeful that we will catch our train.
Any recent travelers into Madrid who can share their immigration timelines?
Thanks and Buen Camino!
Oh 20 that should be easier than easy.I will absolutely you know! Our backpacks are very small - 20L.
The Madrid airport is the worst. The signage is seriously either lacking or misdirecting.When I walked the Camino del Norte I had a connecting flight through Madrid to San Sebastian. I flew Iberia to Madrid and had an Iberian Express (may have been Vueling) flight to San Sebastian. The flight was delayed and a 3 1/2 hour window was shrunk down to an hour. I told the flight attendant and she asked my name and flight and told me to see the customer service person waiting at the end of the ramp after we deplaned. She gave me a pass that got me to the front of the line. What probably would have been a 20-30 minute wait as customs was packed. I went out and into 4A and had to go through security again. That too was a long line but the pass got me right through. It is a really long walk through that huge terminal to get to Iberia Express or Vueling gates. Even with the pass when I arrived the plane was almost completely boarded. Without that pass I would have never have made my connection.
Sorry you had a bad experience, BennyB. I have to admit I’ve been through the Madrid airport (T4 at least) so many times that I don’t need signs, so if you had any specific heads up for where things are confusing, it could really help other.The Madrid airport is the worst. The signage is seriously either lacking or misdirecting.
I think most airports are pretty awful experiences. FOr me the Madrid Airport signage is not a problem. My problem is that to go from my international flight to a domestic connection is like walking a short stage on the camino.The Madrid airport is the worst. The signage is seriously either lacking or misdirecting.
Was immigration difficult, or just time consuming? I have been in other airports where an early arrival means passengers waiting to clear immigration at the end of a night shift with limited staff. Things speed up when additional staff arrive for the regular day shift. In all that, I have never seen immigration officers 'lose their cool' and have always treated arriving passengers with dignity and respect.I went through Madrid last week and immigration was horrible. I was on a flight that landed at 0600 and there were only two agents on duty. At 0700 they added 8 and the line evaporated but it still took 1.5hrs and I was first off the plane. Customs didn’t check anything so no issue there.
The possibility exists, as far as I know, to catch the yellow express bus (one stop en route) to Atocha. Significantly less expensive than the cab, and they both travel on the exact same freeway/road.Hi everyone - we leave in a week for our Camino. Flying direct from Dulles to Madrid with just our backpacks - I.e. no checked luggage. We were originally booked on an Iberia flight to Pamplona that left at noon, but then Iberia changed the flight to a time that now actually leaves before we land at 0805.So we now have a train ticket from the Atocha station at 1035. Will likely taxi from the airport to the train. We are currently booked in seats close to the front of the plane. Barring a delayed arrival, I am hopeful that we will catch our train.
Any recent travelers into Madrid who can share their immigration timelines?
Thanks and Buen Camino!
You hit it on the head. It was a shift change, not anyone losing their cool. Doesn’t really matter though if you’ve got a tight train or air connection. Many, most people can’t do a reset to the the next day.Was immigration difficult, or just time consuming? I have been in other airports where an early arrival means passengers waiting to clear immigration at the end of a night shift with limited staff. Things speed up when additional staff arrive. In all that, I have never seen immigration officers 'lose their cool' and have always treated arriving passengers with dignity and respect.
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