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Which long haul destinations can you fly from London Gatwick airport?

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In 2023, London Gatwick airport announced its 50th long haul destination as Ethiopian Airlines returned with direct flights to Addis Ababa.

Two years on, that figure hasn’t moved although the exact distribution of routes has changed as airlines tweak their route networks.

There are flights to 190 destinations scheduled from Gatwick in August, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium, which is three more routes than in 2023. Overall capacity is projected to be 103.3% of 2019 levels, with a total of 5,110,393 million seats available.

Which long haul destinations can you fly to from Gatwick Airport?

Whilst a large percentage of passengers will be flying to Europe and other short haul destinations, the airport has a surprisingly large contingent of longer routes.

This is for a number of reasons including additional passenger choice (eg Emirates) or simply because Heathrow is congested and Gatwick has the slots available to operate these services (eg the new Singapore Airlines Gatwick flights).

This got me thinking that it would be interesting to see a full list of long haul routes operated from Gatwick in one place. I delved into Cirium’s data to identify all long haul routes operated in 2025.

It is interesting to note the strength of TUI, an airline that we rarely cover on HfP.

Below is the full list of long haul destinations you can fly to from Gatwick, but before that I thought we’d see which routes we have lost and gained since we last ran this article in 2023.

New routes since 2023 include:

  • Bahrain – Gulf Air, flies 3x weekly
  • Bangkok – British Airways, launched last year
  • Bengaluru – Air India
  • Guangzhou – China Southern
  • Halifax, Canada – WestJet
  • Islamabad – British Airways, flights have moved from Heathrow
  • La Romana, Dominican Republic – TUI
  • Lagos – Air Peace
  • Singapore Singapore Airlines, I reviewed the inaugural flight here
  • Zhengzhou – China Southern

Dropped routes since 2023 include:

  • Calgary – WestJet
  • Georgetown, Guyana – British Airways, shortlived as it was only launched in 2022
  • Grenada – British Airways
  • Hanoi – Bamboo Airways, which has pulled back from long haul services
  • Ho Chi Minh City – Bamboo Airways
  • Ilha Do Sal, Cape Verde – TUI
  • Khartoum, Sudan – Badr
  • Liberia, Costa Rica – TUI
  • San Francisco – Norse Atlantic
  • St Kitts – British Airways
  • Tobago – British Airways
  • Washington Dulles – Norse Atlantic

Here are the long-haul routes operating from London Gatwick at some point in 2025. Note that BA’s tag services in the Caribbean are excluded as they are not non-stop. With easyJet et al now running 5-6 hour flights on their standard aircraft you can also argue about where the ‘long haul’ line should be drawn.

AccraBritish Airways
Addis AbabaEthiopian Airlines
AhmedabadAir India
AmritsarAir India
AntiguaBritish Airways
ArubaBritish Airways
BahrainGulf Air
BangkokBritish Airways
Banjul, GambiaTUI
BeijingAir China
BengaluruAir India
Boa Vista (Rabil), Cape VerdeTUI
Boston (Logan)JetBlue
Bridgetown, BarbadosTUI
CancunBritish Airways, TUI
Cape TownBritish Airways, Norse Atlantic
Dakar (Blaise), SenegalTUI
DohaQatar Airways
DubaiEmirates
GoaAir India, TUI
Guanacaste, Costa RicaTUI
GuangzhouChina Southern
Halifax, CanadaWestjet
IslamabadBritish Airways
JeddahSaudia, Wizz Air
KingstonBritish Airways
KochiAir India
La Romana, Dominican RepublicTUI
LagosAir Peace
Las VegasBritish Airways
Los AngelesNorse Atlantic
MauritiusAir Mauritius, British Airways
Melbourne OrlandoTUI
MiamiNorse Atlantic
Montego Bay, JamaicaTUI
Montreal (Trudeau)Air Transat
New York (JFK)British Airways, Delta, Norse, JetBlue
OrlandoBritish Airways, Norse Atlantic
PhuketTUI
Port Of Spain, Trinidad & TobagoBritish Airways
Punta Cana, Dominican RepublicBritish Airways, TUI
Quebec CityAir Transat
San Jose, Costa RicaBritish Airways
Shanghai (Pu Dong)China Eastern
SingaporeSingapore Airlines
St Lucia British Airways, TUI
TampaBritish Airways
TorontoAir Transat
VancouverBritish Airways
ZhengzhouChina Southern
Which long haul destinations can you fly to from Gatwick Airport?

London Gatwick eyes future growth

Gatwick will no doubt hope it can increase this figure if plans to bring its Northern Runway, currently a taxiway, into use are approved. A final decision is not expected until later this year, although transport minister Heidi Alexander said the government was “minded to approve” the project.

Per the Gatwick website:

“The Northern Runway is currently limited to acting as a taxiway, only available when the Main Runway is out of use. The planning application proposes repositioning the centre line of the Northern Runway 12 metres north to allow dual runway operations, aligning with international safety standards.

Construction could start in 2025 and be completed and ready for operational use by the end of the decade. The proposals are low impact, with most construction taking place within the current airport boundary.

Bringing the Northern Runway into routine use alongside the Main Runway would unlock new capacity and allow for a more efficient and resilient operation. If approved the £2.2 billion privately financed plan would be one of the largest capital investment projects in the region for decades. And it would help the airport meet future passenger demand by serving around 75 million passengers a year by the late 2030s.”

Clearly, with the plans still to receive approval, timelines are already slipping and it’s unlikely we’ll see construction start this year.

Even if planning approval is granted, a two-runway Gatwick Airport would not be able to rival Heathrow as the Northern Runway would be significantly shorter. This would restrict it to being used by smaller aircraft during peak hours of operation.

Comments (44)

  • TimUN says:

    BA also fly to Orlando

  • Joe 1990 says:

    Gatwick is not the most convenient from where we are. Heathrow is 1 hour with 1 easy change now the Elizabeth Line open, whereas Gatwick is longer with 2 faff changes!

    Also, until really don’t envy a long flight in BA’s Club Dormitory from LGW.

    Heading to San Jose, Costa Rica early next year and deliberately going from LHR via MAD to avoid LGW … the money saved going via MAD isn’t bad either!

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      But it is the most convenient for millions of other people who thanks to Thameslink can get there via a one seat ride with no changes required.

      • Joe 1990 says:

        Completely agreed!! We’re just a bit too far east of the Thameslink line to take advantage of this.

        I think once Club Suite is finally at Gatwick (I know will be a long time) then may be swayed to West Sussex!

  • DP says:

    EasyJet start Sal in Cape Verde this month. I think more of a mid haul destination but you mention as a Long haul route TUI have stopped. TUI also stopping Costa Rica this month.

    Poor BA customer services having to deal with with customers calling today to say that Head for Points have said their fights to SKB, TAB, GND and GEO are cancelled 🤪

    • ADS says:

      Yes, “Guanacaste, Costa Rica” is the same airport as Liberia, Costa Rica – which Rhys correctly lists as (sadly) having stopped

  • Venturelog says:

    Wizzair to Jeddah can be added as a new route since 2023.
    Would the meaning of long-haul be any flight beyond 5-6 hours?

  • William Avery says:

    Doesn’t look correct re. St Kitts. My parents fly that route once a year still.

  • Will K says:

    Unless they’ve changed me to Heathrow and not said, Grenada is still a BA route this summer.

  • Ryan says:

    Perhaps BA may look at reinstating some of the regionals then, if LGW are eyeing ‘future growth’.

  • TimM says:

    “Which long haul destinations can you fly from London Gatwick airport?”

    Manchester or Leeds and Bradford.

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