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Home»Explore industries/sectors»Aviation»British Airways Route Cuts: 19 Airport Pairs Dropped Since Last Year
Aviation

British Airways Route Cuts: 19 Airport Pairs Dropped Since Last Year

By IslaApril 9, 20264 Mins Read
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LONDON— British Airways (BA) has cut 19 airport pairs from its network since January 2025, with more exits planned later this year as flagged by Cirium. The removals span long-haul, short-haul, and regional routes across multiple UK airports.

While some routes have simply shifted to London Heathrow (LHR), others have been dropped from BA’s network entirely, reflecting a deliberate strategy to consolidate capacity at its primary hub and improve yield performance, Simple Flying reported.

British Airways Drops 19 Routes

British Airways cuts 19 routes since January 2025, consolidating at Heathrow while dropping Kuwait, Aruba, and multiple short-haul markets.British Airways cuts 19 routes since January 2025, consolidating at Heathrow while dropping Kuwait, Aruba, and multiple short-haul markets.
Photo: By Davidi Vardi – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=132086956

Long-Haul Cuts Dominated by London Gatwick

Six of the seven long-haul routes ended since January 2025 operated from London Gatwick (LGW), the UK’s second-busiest airport.

British Airways ceased flights to Cape Town (CPT) in January 2025 and ended services to Aruba (AUA), which had operated via Antigua (ANU), in March 2025.

Routes to Las Vegas (LAS) and New York John F. Kennedy (JFK) were dropped from Gatwick in October 2024, with Tampa (TPA) set to follow in October 2025.

Flights to San José, Costa Rica (SJO) from Gatwick ended in March 2026. Both the San José and Tampa services have transitioned to Heathrow. Aruba is the only long-haul destination removed entirely from BA’s network, with no replacement service offered from any UK airport.

British Airways Route Cuts: 19 Airport Pairs Dropped Since Last YearBritish Airways Route Cuts: 19 Airport Pairs Dropped Since Last Year
Photo- Krzysztof Kaczala
Wikimedia Commons

Kuwait Becomes the Sole Heathrow Long-Haul Casualty

The one long-haul Heathrow (LHR) route to end was London to Kuwait City (KWI), a service that had been part of BA’s network for over 60 years before being axed in March 2025.

The route was operated by Boeing 787-9 and 787-10 aircraft in its final years. Load factors were not competitive, and a significant share of traffic consisted of transit passengers connecting to onward flights at Heathrow, a lower-yielding segment compared to point-to-point travelers.

Kuwait Airways (KU) had been growing its own Heathrow frequencies ahead of the route’s end, with plans for two to three daily flights in 2026, which intensified competitive pressure on BA’s operation.

Amidst a demanding operational landscape, London Gatwick Airport sustained robust travel demand during the first half (H1) of 2023.Amidst a demanding operational landscape, London Gatwick Airport sustained robust travel demand during the first half (H1) of 2023.
Photo: London Gatwick

Gatwick Freed Up for Strategic Redeployment

By consolidating long-haul operations at Heathrow, BA has redirected Gatwick-based aircraft to other uses.

The airline has increased frequencies on key transatlantic routes from Heathrow: New York JFK (JFK) now receives nine daily flights during the summer 2025 schedule, while Las Vegas (LAS) is served up to 10 times weekly. These moves are aimed at strengthening BA’s competitive position at its core hub.

Nine Short-Haul Routes Also Eliminated

British Airways Boeing 777British Airways Boeing 777
Photo: Frank Kovalchek | Flickr

Heathrow Short-Haul Exits

BA ended its Heathrow-Grenoble (GNB) service in April 2025, consolidating that market under its EuroFlyer unit at Gatwick. A short-lived Heathrow-Bilbao (BIO) link also ceased the following month, having operated just ten round-trip flights in total.

Heathrow-Izmir (ADB) was eliminated in September 2025, despite only launching in May 2024. Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen (SAW), located on the Asian side of the city, was also removed from the network in October 2025. Cologne (CGN), Riga (RIX), and Stuttgart (STR) flights from Heathrow all ended in March 2026.

The Riga route, served since 2023, carried 67,142 round-trip passengers in 2025 according to UK Civil Aviation Authority data, yielding a seat factor of approximately 75%. Intense low-cost carrier competition from other London-area airports is likely to have suppressed yields on that route. Heathrow-Kalamata (KLX) also ended in October 2025, switching to Gatwick.

Gatwick Short-Haul Cut

EuroFlyer, BA’s Gatwick-based unit, ended its Gatwick-Salerno (QSR) service in October 2025. Neither Salerno, a gateway to the Amalfi Coast, nor Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen currently appear on BA’s route map.

British Airways cuts 19 routes since January 2025, consolidating at Heathrow while dropping Kuwait, Aruba, and multiple short-haul markets.British Airways cuts 19 routes since January 2025, consolidating at Heathrow while dropping Kuwait, Aruba, and multiple short-haul markets.
Photo: Nabil Molinari | Flickr

Four Regional Routes Dropped From Other UK Airports

BA CityFlyer ended its London City (LCY)-Prague (PRG) service in March 2025. The route had operated since 2017, initially with six weekly flights, though frequencies had been reduced progressively. The following month, a Sunday-only Stansted (STN)-Amsterdam (AMS) flight was also cut.

That Stansted-Amsterdam service had functioned as a practical positioning operation: the Embraer E190 (E190) flew passengers from Stansted to Amsterdam, then repositioned to London City for the start of weekday operations. Revenue from bookable seats helped offset the cost of the positioning flight.

Edinburgh (EDI)-Olbia (OLB) also ended in September 2025, having operated for under 18 months. Most significantly, CityFlyer ended its long-running London City-Frankfurt (FRA) service. BA still serves Frankfurt from Heathrow, but the London City operation has ended after years of facing a competitor with higher and growing frequencies on the same route.

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