Technology

Zara employees announce plan for Black Friday protests outside of stores

2025-11-21 14:31
316 views
Zara employees announce plan for Black Friday protests outside of stores

Zara is the world’s largest fast-fashion retailer

  1. News
  2. World
  3. Europe
Zara employees announce plan for Black Friday protests outside of stores

Zara is the world’s largest fast-fashion retailer

Corina Pons,Helen ReidFriday 21 November 2025 14:31 GMTCommentsVideo Player PlaceholderCloseZara employees plan to protest on Black FridayOn The Ground

On The Ground newsletter: Get a weekly dispatch from our international correspondents

Get a weekly dispatch from our international correspondents

Get a weekly international news dispatch

On The GroundEmail*SIGN UP

I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. Read our Privacy notice

Workers at Zara are planning widespread protests across seven European countries this Black Friday, a crucial sales period, to demand the reinstatement of a profit-sharing scheme.

The European Works Council for parent company Inditex, in coordination with Spain's CCOO union, announced that demonstrations are scheduled for 28 November outside Zara stores in major cities across Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, and Spain.

Rosa Galan, a CCOO representative at Inditex, confirmed that Zara previously operated a profit-sharing programme, which was discontinued following the pandemic. "We are once again asking that a company that has huge profits, which are the result of the work of its staff, distribute those profits fairly," Galan stated, highlighting the core demand. Inditex has not yet responded to requests for comment regarding the planned industrial action.

The world's largest listed fast-fashion retailer has experienced robust sales growth in the years since the coronavirus pandemic, with its shares having doubled in value over the past three years.

Black Friday, the final Friday of November, and the surrounding weeks represent a key sales window for retailers, often utilised by workers globally to spotlight their demands through strikes and protests.

This follows similar actions on Black Friday in 2022, when Spanish workers protested for higher pay, leading to a 20 per cent average wage increase for Inditex store staff in its home country three months later.

Zara employees plan to protest on Black FridayZara employees plan to protest on Black Friday (AFP via Getty Images)

Zara employees' strike is just the latest company to see disruption this holiday season. Starbucks workers went on strike this week on the launch of Red Cup Day, which is typically one of its busiest days of the year.

At least 95 Starbucks stores in 65 US cities participated in the strike, Starbucks Workers United union said.

There is no date set for the strike to end, and more stores are prepared to join if Starbucks doesn’t reach a contract agreement with the union, organizers said.

More about

ZaraworkersSharesUnionBlack Friday

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Most popular

    Popular videos

      Bulletin

        Read next