site.btaPossible Traffic Disruptions at Bulgaria-Greece Border Due to Strike Action

Possible Traffic Disruptions at Bulgaria-Greece Border Due to Strike Action
Possible Traffic Disruptions at Bulgaria-Greece Border Due to Strike Action
Greek farmers and livestock breeders protest at the Kulata-Promachonas border control checkpoint, December 4, 2025 (BTA Photo/Denitsa Kyuchukova)

Due to strike action on Greek territory, difficulties may arise for both passenger cars and heavy goods vehicles when crossing all border control checkpoints in both directions along the Bulgaria-Greece border, the Border Police General Directorate said on its website on Sunday morning.

Traffic is normal at all Bulgarian border checkpoints with Turkiye, the Republic of North Macedonia and Serbia, as well as at the border crossings with Romania.

The current wave of Greek farmers’ and livestock breeders’ protests began in late November 2025, triggered by delays in the payment of EU-backed agricultural subsidies after a corruption scandal at Greece’s agricultural payments agency OPEKEPE led to intensified checks and payment bottlenecks. While the government began making partial payments, protesters escalated with rolling road blockades using tractors and other farm machinery.

The protests intensified in early December, affecting major road arteries and, crucially for Bulgaria, border traffic. On December 3, traffic on the Bulgarian side of the Kulata-Promachonas checkpoint was suspended, with queues forming and a heightened police presence; Greek media cited expanding blockades, with thousands of agricultural machines positioned along roads in Thessaly and a new blockade near Trikala. On December 6, kilometre-long truck queues were reported at Kulata amid suspended heavy goods traffic and “time slots” for crossings, with warnings that a full closure could follow.

The situation on the ground is fluid, with blockades being lifted and reimposed. On December 6-7, Greek farmers lifted the Promachonas blockade, allowing lorries through after earlier restrictions that had permitted only cars, buses and vehicles carrying perishable goods; at the same time, protests continued elsewhere in Greece and police used tear gas near Thessaloniki airport during an attempted road blockage.
By mid-December, farmers again blocked the Kulata-Promachonas crossing for trucks and briefly blocked the main passenger entrance to Thessaloniki port, with solidarity actions reported from other groups.

As of late December and early January, he protests are continuing with nationwide blockade points and signs of internal division over whether to negotiate. An end-December update cited 57 blockade points and plans for a national meeting to decide next steps.

High-profile actions such as a “siege” of Volos port by tractors and supporting fishermen, while the government signalled readiness for talks once farmers appoint a delegation.

Border-disruption notices have remained frequent. There have been multiple Border Police warnings of difficulties at all Bulgaria-Greece crossings due to strike action and blockades, plus specific freight restrictions/closures (including Ilinden-Exochi restrictions for heavy vehicles and temporary suspension of lorry traffic via Kapitan Petko Voyvoda-Ormenion, with Kulata resuming traffic at points).

/KK/

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By 03:04 on 09.01.2026 Today`s news

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