British holidaymakers caught up in chaos at UK airports are also facing long queues when they touch down for Spain holidays.
Weary tourists arriving at Palma de Majorca Airport are taking an average of nearly three hours after landing to reach the coaches waiting to take them to their hotels, it is being claimed.
The problems have been blamed mainly on a lack of police at passport control, especially on Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays when most of the flights bringing in package holidaymakers land in Majorca.
The long delays at passport control are having a knock-on effect throughout the system, leading to people arriving at their hotels much later than planned.
Analysts have predicted the situation, blamed mainly on staff shortages, will worsen towards the weekend because more than 10,000 flights are expected to leave the UK between Thursday and Sunday.
Reports in Spain today said around 180 passengers on a Ryanair flight from Manchester to Alicante had to wait nearly three hours in a corridor for the shuttle bus to take them to their plane after going through their boarding gate.
Costa Blanca newspaper Diario Informacion said passengers received no explanation from the airline and were given no food or water during their wait.
On social media reviews of the airport are mixed, with some people saying they breezed through passport control onto the island in just 15 minutes.
Others are less positive.
One British man said: "Flew out last night to Majorca from LBA, From baggage check in to through security took about 15 mins!
"Palma airport on the other hand was a nightmare. An hour and a half to get through passport control! It’s a s**t show everywhere it seems!"
Balearic Transport Business Federation representatives met with the region’s central government delegate Aina Calvo on Monday to seek solutions.
FEBT manager Salvador Servera said: “The government delegate said the problems would ease in June with the arrival of more police but it’s vital this happens because the entire summer season is at stake.”
Police union SUP earlier this month demanded the deployment of more officers at Palma Airport after complaining about “long delays” at passport control.
Javier Gandara, President of the Airlines Association in Spain, also called the queues at the airports in Palma and other Spanish holiday destinations “undesirable” and said he feared they would leave visitors with a “bad image” of the country unless the situation improved.
He also called on Spain to consider following the lead of Portugal which in April began fast-tracking UK travellers at its airports and allowed Brits to avoid long queues when they enter the country.
Portugal’s neighbour, traditionally the favourite foreign holiday destination for British tourists, has shown no inkling so far to change its procedures in line with Lisbon.
Concerns about the misery facing UK tourists when they reach their sunshine destination were raised as half-term holidaymakers queued for hours and slept on terminal floors as they tried to leave Britain yesterday.
The flight is said to have left Manchester more than three and a half hours late just after 10pm yesterday/on Monday.
One passenger from Benidorm on the flight packed with British families heading to Spain for half-term holidays, told the Costa Blanca newspaper before boarding: “They’ve squashed us in like sardines on the stairs of the tunnel leading down to the runway.”