London Berlin

6 nonstop pairs · 5 nonstop airlines · 208 nonstop flights/week

London to Berlin is under two hours. easyJet from Gatwick and Ryanair from Stansted both fly daily for about half the price of British Airways. If you are paying your own fare, fly easyJet or Ryanair. BA makes sense if you live near Heathrow or need to pick your exact departure time.

Six airlines show up in search results but only three fly their own planes. If you see JetBlue or Cathay Pacific on this route, that is a BA flight sold under their name. You are sitting on the same plane either way.

There is no practical train. It goes through Brussels and Cologne with two changes and takes most of a day. Fly.

BER is a single-terminal airport and you will be curbside fast. The FEX express reaches Hauptbahnhof in 30 minutes. The S9 costs a fraction of the price and makes stops across Mitte. Unless you are headed straight to Hauptbahnhof, take the S9.

Have a specific need? Use the decision guide below to filter by your airline, where you live, lounges, or where you're staying in Berlin.

Best Overall
LHR BER
2 airlines 133/wk 1h 55m
Eurowings, British Airways. British Airways from Heathrow when schedule flexibility matters more than the fare.
Explore LHR → BER
Strong Alternative
STN → BER
2 airlines · 22/wk · 1h 45m
Ryanair, Ryanair UK. easyJet from Gatwick saves money and runs daily, but you lose Heathrow's transit links and BA's rebooking depth.

Pick What Matters to You

Show me the best pair for...

Best pair by where you're coming from

Your location determines which airport is closest and most convenient.
Westminster and the West End Best
Heathrow is the airport. The Elizabeth Line from Paddington takes around 30 minutes and runs frequently. The Piccadilly Line is slower at about 50 minutes but stops at more central stations along the way. From Soho, Covent Garden, or Mayfair, you are at Heathrow check-in in under an hour.
Kensington, Chelsea, and West London Best
Heathrow again. Piccadilly Line from Earl's Court or Gloucester Road in about 40 minutes. Paddington is one Tube stop from Bayswater and a short taxi from most of west London. The Elizabeth Line from Paddington is the fastest route to any terminal.
The City and Canary Wharf Best
London City Airport is six miles from the Square Mile and connected by DLR. Bank station to the terminal takes around 20 minutes. For other airports, the Elizabeth Line runs from Liverpool Street to Heathrow without changing trains.
Shoreditch, Hackney, and East London
Stansted Express from Liverpool Street in 47 minutes. Liverpool Street is a short bus or bike from most of east London. London City is also close on the DLR from Stratford or Limehouse. Heathrow is over an hour on the Elizabeth Line from here.
South London, Brixton, and Croydon Good
Gatwick is closer than Heathrow from anything south of the river. Gatwick Express from Victoria in 30 minutes, or Southern trains from Clapham Junction and London Bridge. East Croydon to Gatwick is 15 minutes by train.
Camden, Islington, and North London Good
Luton is the closest budget airport. Train from St Pancras takes around 25 minutes. King's Cross and St Pancras sit next to each other, with Piccadilly, Northern, Victoria, and Hammersmith lines all converging. The Piccadilly Line also runs to Heathrow from King's Cross in about 50 minutes.
Surrey and Outer Southeast Flexible
Gatwick is down the M23, around 20 to 30 minutes by car from most of Surrey. Southern rail connects East Croydon, Redhill, and the Gatwick corridor. Heathrow means crossing south London or looping the M25.
For most London-area travelers, LHR → BER is the default.2 airlines, 133 flights/wk.
Explore LHR → BER

Best pair by where you're staying in Berlin

Your Berlin airport matters as much as your London airport.
Mitte Best
The center of Berlin and where most first-time visitors stay. Museum Island, Brandenburg Gate, and Unter den Linden are all here. Hotels range from budget to high-end. Hauptbahnhof is in Mitte, so the FEX from the airport drops you right in the neighborhood.
Kreuzberg Good
Street food, bars, and a younger crowd. More character than the glossy parts of Mitte and well connected by U-Bahn. Stay here for nightlife and a less corporate feel. Oranienstrasse and the area around Kottbusser Tor are the liveliest blocks.
Charlottenburg Good
West Berlin's old center around Kurfurstendamm. Department stores, upscale restaurants, and business hotels. Quieter than Mitte at night. A strong base for business travelers who prefer a calmer neighborhood with good U-Bahn connections.
Friedrichshain Value
East Side Gallery, Berghain, and some of the cheapest hostels in central Berlin. Young, loud on weekends, and connected by S-Bahn. Budget travelers and nightlife seekers end up here.
Prenzlauer Berg Tradeoff
Tree-lined streets, independent cafes, and a residential feel. Popular with families and visitors who want a quieter stay. The Sunday flea market at Mauerpark draws a crowd. Easy U-Bahn access to the center.
BER is the right Berlin airport for most travelers.Check individual route pages for ground transport from BER.
Explore LHR → BER

Which pair your airline flies nonstop

Loyalty programs drive airport choice for frequent flyers. Here's where each airline operates.
AirlineLHR–BERSTN–BERLCY–BERLGW–BER
Ryanair
British Airways
easyJet
Eurowings
Ryanair UK
Most airlines fly LHR → BER.1 airlines serve multiple pairs.
Explore LHR → BER

Ranked by on-time performance

On-time = departing within 15 min of schedule. Higher competition tends to keep airlines punctual.
LHR → BER
Insufficient data — 133/wk doesn't generate meaningful OTP stats.
STN → BER
Insufficient data — 22/wk doesn't generate meaningful OTP stats.
LCY → BER
Insufficient data — 25/wk doesn't generate meaningful OTP stats.
LGW → BER
Insufficient data — 22/wk doesn't generate meaningful OTP stats.
SEN → BER
Insufficient data — 2/wk doesn't generate meaningful OTP stats.
LTN → BER
Insufficient data — 4/wk doesn't generate meaningful OTP stats.
LHR → BER has the most schedule depth.High competition keeps airlines punctual.
Explore LHR → BER

Lounge access by airport and terminal

Premium lounge access varies dramatically by terminal. This alone can determine airport choice for some travelers.
LGW South Terminal No1 Lounge Good
Priority Pass and pay-per-entry. Decent food, bar, and seating. Gets crowded during holiday departures. The best lounge option in South Terminal if you do not have airline status.
LGW North Terminal Lounges Value
Smaller selection. A No1 Lounge and a couple of carrier-specific options. Quality is average. Gatwick does not have the lounge depth of Heathrow, which reflects its budget and leisure focus.
LHR T5 British Airways Galleries Top Tier
BA business class and oneworld Emerald or Sapphire. The Galleries First has a champagne bar and showers. The Club lounge is larger but more crowded. T5 is BA's home terminal and the lounge reflects it.
LHR T3 Virgin Clubhouse Good
Upper Class passengers on Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse or the BA Galleries for character. Shower access is available.
LHR Priority Pass / Amex Lounges Value
Plaza Premium and No1 Lounges accept Priority Pass and Amex Platinum across multiple terminals. Quality is hit or miss and they get crowded, especially during the morning departure wave. Better than nothing if your carrier does not have its own lounge.
STN Escape Lounge Value
Pay-per-entry and Priority Pass. Basic food, drinks, and seating. Stansted is a budget airport and the lounge options reflect that. Fine for a quiet hour before departure, but do not expect Heathrow-level quality.
LTN Aspire Lounge Value
Pay-per-entry and Priority Pass. Small, basic, and often crowded during peak travel periods. Luton is a budget airport and lounge expectations should match. Hot food, drinks, and a quiet corner if you get there early.
British Airways Lounge Top Tier
Open to Club Europe passengers and qualifying British Airways Executive Club members. Compact but clean, with food, drinks, and runway views. The terminal is small enough that you can leave the lounge 10 minutes before boarding and make your gate.
General Departures Area Good
If you do not have lounge access, the departures area has coffee shops and a few restaurants airside. The terminal is modern and the wait is rarely uncomfortable. Quick security processing means you do not need to arrive early.
No lounge facility
Southend does not have an airside lounge. The terminal past security has a small bar and cafe. If lounge access matters to you, this is not the airport for it.
Terminal 1 Airside Lounges Good
Several lounges operate past security in Terminal 1. Access through business class tickets, airline status, Priority Pass, or paid day passes. The spaces opened with the terminal in 2020 and are clean and modern. Expect seating, Wi-Fi, drinks, and light food.
Priority Pass Access Value
Priority Pass is accepted at select Terminal 1 lounges. Check current participation before traveling as the lineup has shifted since the airport opened. During peak hours, capacity limits may apply.
Planning Around Limited Scale Flexible
Berlin is not a major airline hub, so lounge options are fewer than at Frankfurt or Munich. If lounge access matters to you, clear security early. The terminal is compact enough that the walk from lounges to gates is short.
Your airline and cabin class determine which lounges you can access.Check route pages for terminal assignments.
Explore LHR → BER

Ranked by flights per week

More flights = more flexibility. Miss your flight, catch the next one. Schedule depth is insurance.
LHR → BER #1
133/wk (~19/day) — 2 airlines.
STN → BER
22/wk (~3/day) — 2 airlines.
LCY → BER
25/wk (~4/day) — 1 airlines.
LGW → BER
22/wk (~3/day) — 1 airlines.
SEN → BER
2/wk (~0/day) — 1 airlines.
LTN → BER
4/wk (~1/day) — 1 airlines.
LHR → BER: 133 flights/week.19 departures per day.
Explore LHR → BER

Getting to the airport

Cost and time vary by mode. Train is more predictable than driving.
Gatwick Express Best
30 minutes to Victoria station, nonstop. Runs every 15 minutes during the day. Victoria connects to the Victoria, District, and Circle lines. Fast and reliable.
Southern / Thameslink Trains Good
Cheaper than the Gatwick Express and run to more stations including London Bridge, Blackfriars, and St Pancras. Takes 30 to 45 minutes depending on route and stops. Good if your hotel is south of the river or near King's Cross.
National Express Coach Value
Budget bus to Victoria Coach Station. Takes 60 to 90 minutes depending on traffic. Very cheap but very slow. Only worth it if you are watching every pound.
Taxi Flexible
Expect around 70 to 120 pounds into central London. The drive is longer than from Heathrow and the M23/A23 can be slow. Not recommended unless you are headed to south London or have a lot of luggage.
Elizabeth Line Best
Contactless payment, 30 minutes to Paddington, and the line continues east through the West End to Liverpool Street and Canary Wharf without changing. Runs frequently from early morning. This is the default way into London for anyone not in a rush.
Heathrow Express Good
15 minutes nonstop to Paddington. Around 25 pounds. Faster than the Elizabeth Line but only saves you 15 minutes and costs significantly more. Worth it if your meeting starts in an hour.
Piccadilly Line Value
Cheapest option. 50 to 60 minutes into central London with stops at Hammersmith, Earl's Court, South Kensington, and King's Cross. Gets crowded during rush hour and there is no luggage space. Fine for budget travelers with a backpack.
Taxi / Minicab Flexible
Black cab from Heathrow to central London costs around 50 to 90 pounds depending on destination and traffic. Minicab apps are cheaper. The M4 motorway can be slow during morning rush. Takes 45 to 75 minutes.
Stansted Express Best
47 minutes to Liverpool Street station, nonstop. Runs every 15 to 30 minutes. Liverpool Street connects to the Central, Circle, Hammersmith, Metropolitan, and Elizabeth lines. The best option unless you are going north.
National Express Coach Value
Budget bus to Stratford, Liverpool Street, and Victoria. Takes 60 to 90 minutes depending on traffic and stops. Significantly cheaper than the train.
Taxi Flexible
Expect around 100 to 150 pounds into central London. The M11 can be slow. Only sensible if you are sharing the cost or heading to north London or Cambridge.
DART + Thameslink Best
The Luton DART connects the terminal to Luton Airport Parkway station in under 4 minutes. From there, Thameslink trains run to St Pancras, Farringdon, City Thameslink, and London Bridge. Total journey to St Pancras is around 35 to 45 minutes.
National Express / easyBus Value
Coach services to Victoria, Baker Street, and other London stops. Takes 60 to 90 minutes depending on traffic. Budget option.
Taxi Flexible
Expect around 80 to 130 pounds into central London. The M1 motorway can slow to a crawl near the city. Only practical if you are heading north of London or splitting the fare.
DLR (Docklands Light Railway) Best
London City Airport station is attached to the terminal. Trains run every few minutes to Bank station in about 20 minutes and to Canary Wharf in about 10. The cheapest and fastest way into the city.
Elizabeth Line from Custom House Good
Custom House station is about a 10-minute walk from the terminal. The Elizabeth line reaches Liverpool Street in about 12 minutes and Paddington in about 25. Useful if your destination sits along the Elizabeth line.
Taxi or Rideshare Flexible
A taxi to the City of London takes 15 to 25 minutes depending on traffic. To the West End, allow 30 to 40 minutes. The DLR is faster and cheaper for destinations along its line.
Greater Anglia train Best
Southend Airport station is attached to the terminal. Direct trains run to London Liverpool Street in around 55 minutes. Trains run every 15 to 20 minutes during the day.
Taxi or car Good
The airport is next to the A127 road. Taxis to Southend town center cost around 10 pounds. On-site parking is cheap compared to other London airports. If you live within driving distance, parking and driving is often the simplest option.
Weigh transit time against schedule flexibility.A faster airport with fewer flights may not save you time overall.
Explore LHR → BER

Red-eye vs daytime departures

Departure timing affects jet lag, hotel costs, and how you spend your first day.
Not applicable
At two hours, London to Berlin has no overnight flights. The latest departures arrive before midnight.
LHR → BER has the most departure options.Check the route page for schedule details.
Explore LHR → BER

Premium cabin options

Business and first class products on this route, ranked by value and quality.
British Airways Club Europe from Heathrow Top
Short-haul business class: an economy seat with the middle blocked, not a flat bed. What matters on a two-hour flight is not the seat but what comes with the ticket. Heathrow lounge access, priority boarding, a meal, and flexible rebooking. For frequent travelers, the fare class flexibility alone can justify the price.
Budget carrier extras Flexible
easyJet sells Flexi fares with fast-track security at some airports and the ability to change flights. Ryanair offers priority boarding and extra legroom rows. On a two-hour flight, none of this changes the experience much. Pay for flexibility if you need it, not comfort.
Check route pages for cabin details per airline.Business class products vary significantly between carriers.
Explore LHR → BER

Connecting through London from a domestic flight

Every London airport with Berlin service flies nonstop. If a search returns a routing through Amsterdam or Frankfurt, the direct flights are either sold out or priced high. Check a different London departure airport before booking a connection on a two-hour route.

Arriving LGW Best
Book LGW → BER. Same airport, no ground transport needed. 1 airlines, 22/wk.
Arriving LHR Best
Book LHR → BER. Same airport, no ground transport needed. 2 airlines, 133/wk.
Arriving STN Best
Book STN → BER. Same airport, no ground transport needed. 2 airlines, 22/wk.
Arriving LTN
LTN has no Berlin nonstops. Your airline may offer a single-ticket connection through a hub. Otherwise, ground transport to a nonstop airport.
Arriving LCY Best
Book LCY → BER. Same airport, no ground transport needed. 1 airlines, 25/wk.
Arriving SEN
SEN has no Berlin nonstops. Your airline may offer a single-ticket connection through a hub. Otherwise, ground transport to a nonstop airport.
Self-connecting
Avoid cross-airport transfers. No direct transit links between most metro airports. Budget 4+ hours minimum if you must.
Check which London airport your domestic flight arrives at, then book Berlin from that same airport.LHR arrivals → LHR–BER · STN arrivals → STN–BER
LHR → BER

London & Berlin Airport Profiles

Each airport has a personality. Terminal quality, transit access, lounge scene, and crowd levels vary dramatically — sometimes more than the flight itself.

LHR London Heathrow Airport Primary

Heathrow has four active terminals and your airline determines which one you use. Terminal 5 is British Airways territory, the newest and most polished. Terminal 2, the Queen's Terminal, handles Star Alliance carriers. Terminal 3 has Virgin Atlantic and several US carriers. Terminal 4 is smaller and serves a mix of international airlines.

The terminals are not walkable between each other. Free inter-terminal transfers run on the Elizabeth Line or Heathrow Express between T2/T3 (which share a central area) and T5. T4 requires a separate bus. Build in 60 minutes if you need to change terminals for a connection.

Immigration at 6 to 8 AM is slow. The morning wave of transatlantic red-eyes all land in the same window, and queues back up. E-gates work for US passport holders, which helps, but the volume is real. The airport is well-signed and functional, not beautiful. Shopping is extensive if you clear customs early.

Berlin Pairs
1
BER
Airlines
2
Flights/Week
133
LCY London City Airport Secondary

London City Airport is the smallest of London's six airports, sitting in the Royal Docks between Canary Wharf and the Thames Barrier. The terminal is compact: one security area leads to a small departures lounge with views of the runway. You can arrive 30 minutes before a domestic flight and make it comfortably.

The runway is short, which limits the airport to smaller aircraft types. The approach is steep, which some passengers notice on landing. The upside of the small scale: no long walks to gates, no terminal train, no maze of corridors. A small selection of restaurants and shops sits airside.

Berlin Pairs
1
BER
Airlines
1
Flights/Week
25
LGW London Gatwick Airport Secondary

Gatwick has two terminals, North and South, connected by a free shuttle train that takes about two minutes. South Terminal is the larger of the two and handles most scheduled long-haul flights. North Terminal serves a mix of short-haul and charter carriers.

The airport is smaller than Heathrow and easier to navigate. Security queues are generally shorter except during summer holiday peaks. The walk from security to gates in South Terminal is short. The overall experience is less stressful than Heathrow, which is part of the appeal for budget travelers.

Gatwick sits 30 miles south of central London, roughly twice the distance of Heathrow. The Gatwick Express runs to Victoria in 30 minutes, which is competitive, but Victoria is not as well connected to east London as Paddington.

Berlin Pairs
1
BER
Airlines
1
Flights/Week
22
STN London Stansted Airport Secondary

Stansted is a single-terminal airport designed by Norman Foster, and the building itself is worth noticing. The roof structure is a clean white canopy held up by trees of steel columns. It opened in 1991 and still looks modern. The terminal is compact and navigation is straightforward.

Stansted is a budget carrier hub. Ryanair dominates the departure boards. Long-haul service is limited. Most traffic is European short-haul on budget carriers. The airport does one thing well: move large numbers of passengers through a simple layout with short walking distances.

It sits 40 miles northeast of central London, the farthest of the four London airports from the city. The Stansted Express runs to Liverpool Street in 47 minutes, which is reasonable, but you are starting from much farther out.

Berlin Pairs
1
BER
Airlines
2
Flights/Week
22
LTN London Luton Airport Limited Service

Luton is a single-terminal airport 35 miles north of central London that has been undergoing expansion. The DART people-mover opened in 2023, replacing the old shuttle bus from the Luton Airport Parkway rail station. That shuttle bus was always the weakest link in getting to central London from Luton, and the DART fixes it.

The terminal is compact and functional. It serves mostly budget carriers on European routes. Any transatlantic service from New York is rare and seasonal. The airport handles fewer passengers than Heathrow, Gatwick, or Stansted, and it shows in the smaller food and retail options.

Luton works well for travelers headed to the north side of London, Bedfordshire, or the Midlands. For everyone else, the distance to central London and the limited flight options make it primarily a budget carrier airport.

Berlin Pairs
1
BER
Airlines
1
Flights/Week
4
SEN London Southend Airport Limited Service

London Southend is a small regional airport in Essex with a train station attached directly to the terminal building. The terminal handles a limited number of routes. Security queues rarely take more than 10 minutes, and the walk from the entrance to the gate is short.

The departures area past security has a few shops and food outlets. Do not expect the range of a larger airport. What Southend offers is speed: if you live nearby, you can leave home an hour before departure and make the flight.

Berlin Pairs
1
BER
Airlines
1
Flights/Week
2
BER Berlin Brandenburg Airport Primary

Berlin Brandenburg opened in 2020 after years of construction delays, replacing both Tegel and Schonefeld. Terminal 1 is modern and compact, with short walks from security to the gates. The layout is a single main building with two piers, and most facilities sit between check-in and the gate areas.

The airport is 14 miles south of central Berlin in flat countryside. Ceilings are high, signage is clear, and the overall feel is clean and new. Food and shopping options are reasonable but not extensive. Non-EU passport control can slow down during peak arrival windows.

London Pairs
6
LHR + STN + LCY + LGW + SEN + LTN
Nonstop from London
208/wk
Into Berlin
30 min
FEX Train

Full Comparison

Every airport combination ranked by schedule depth. LHR–BER carries 64% of weekly flights with the best on-time record. STN–BER adds another 11%. The remaining 4 pairs share 25% between them.

RouteAirlinesFlights/WkShareDurationOTP
LHR → BER 2 133
1h 55m Explore →
STN → BER 2 22
1h 45m Explore →
LCY → BER 1 25
1h 42m Explore →
LGW → BER 1 22
1h 55m Explore →
SEN → BER 1 2
1h 40m Explore →
LTN → BER 1 4
1h 50m Explore →

Which Airlines Fly Which Pairs

British Airways serve both LHR and LCY to BER — airport flexibility on the London side.

Not all planes are the same size. The aircraft type below each checkmark tells you whether you are getting a widebody (777, 787, A350) with wider seats and a quieter ride, or a narrowbody (737, A321) with a single aisle. On flights over five hours, the difference is significant.

LHR–BER
STN–BER
LCY–BER
LGW–BER
British Airways

A320, A321neo

E190
Eurowings

A321neo
Ryanair

737-800, 737 MAX 8
Ryanair UK

737-800
easyJet

A319, A320

Route Facts

Total Nonstops
208/wk
Across 6 pairs
Airlines
5
2 on LHR–BER
Fastest Pair
1h 55m
LHR → BER
Distance
591 mi
951 km
London
6 airports
LGW, LHR, STN, LTN, LCY, SEN
Berlin
1 airports
BER

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about London to Berlin flights.
If you live in west or central London, Heathrow is 15 miles away and connected by the Piccadilly line and Elizabeth line. Stansted is 36 miles northeast. Price the full door-to-door trip, not just the airfare. The time and money getting to Stansted can close the gap. If you live in south London, Gatwick may be the fastest airport to reach regardless of airline.
Take the FEX express train to Hauptbahnhof, about 30 minutes. From there, the S-Bahn or U-Bahn reaches Alexanderplatz in under 10 minutes. The S-Bahn S9 runs directly from the airport into central Berlin for less money but takes around 45 minutes. Taxis to Mitte run around 40 to 50 euros.
Yes. JetBlue, Cathay Pacific, and Qatar Airways sell codeshare tickets on BA-operated flights from Heathrow. You can book through those airlines' websites or redeem their miles. The flight, crew, and aircraft are British Airways. easyJet and Ryanair have no codeshare or alliance partnerships.
From Heathrow, British Airways runs enough departures that a missed flight means a wait of a few hours, not a day. Gatwick and Stansted each have daily easyJet or Ryanair service but not hourly. Luton has the thinnest schedule at a few flights a week. If same-day flexibility matters, Heathrow is the only airport with real rebooking depth.
The Stansted Express from Liverpool Street costs around 20 to 30 pounds each way depending on when you book. The train from St Pancras to Luton Airport Parkway is cheaper but still adds around 15 to 20 pounds. A budget fare that saves around 50 pounds over British Airways can lose half that advantage on the airport transfer alone.
No. You would need Eurostar to Brussels or Paris, then onward connections through Cologne, adding up to around 10 hours or more. Flying is the only practical option for this route.
Brandenburg opened in 2020 and the terminal is modern and compact. The walk from the gate to passport control is short. UK arrivals go through the non-EU line, which can slow down during peak evening hours. The FEX and S-Bahn platforms sit directly below Terminal 1 with clear signage.