London Edinburgh
London to Edinburgh is served by four London airports and a direct train, all getting you there in roughly the same door-to-door time.
If you are flying on points or want walk-up flexibility: British Airways from Heathrow, roughly every hour all day. If you are paying cash: easyJet from Gatwick or Stansted, several flights a day from both, usually the cheapest fares on the route. Ryanair flies Stansted too. Luton has easyJet daily but fewer departures.
If getting into central Edinburgh matters most, take the LNER train from Kings Cross. About four hours twenty minutes, and it drops you at Waverley Station between Edinburgh Castle and Princes Street. Edinburgh Airport is 8 miles west of the city, so once you add airport transfers and security on both ends, flying takes about the same total time.
Which London airport you leave from matters more than which airline you pick. If you live south of the Thames, Gatwick saves you a painful cross-London trip to Heathrow or Kings Cross. If you are in north London, the train from Kings Cross or a flight from Luton are both right there. The route has so many flights from so many departure points that your postcode should be driving the decision.
Have a specific need? Use the decision guide below to filter by your airline, where you live, lounges, or where you're staying in Edinburgh.
Pick What Matters to You
Best pair by where you're coming from
Best pair by where you're staying in Edinburgh
Which pair your airline flies nonstop
| Airline | LHR–EDI | STN–EDI | LCY–EDI | LTN–EDI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| easyJet | — | ✓ | — | ✓ |
| British Airways | ✓ | — | ✓ | — |
| Ryanair UK | — | ✓ | — | — |
Ranked by on-time performance
Lounge access by airport and terminal
Ranked by flights per week
Getting to the airport
Red-eye vs daytime departures
Premium cabin options
Connecting through London from a domestic flight
Three carriers run direct flights from four London airports and the train covers it in four hours twenty minutes. A connection through a third airport would add hours to a trip that already takes half a day door to door. There is no scenario where connecting makes sense on this route.
London & Edinburgh Airport Profiles
Each airport has a personality. Terminal quality, transit access, lounge scene, and crowd levels vary dramatically — sometimes more than the flight itself.
London Metro
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Edinburgh Metro
Edinburgh Airport has one terminal, and you can see most of it from the main departures hall. Security splits into a fast track line and a standard lane, and during morning peaks the standard queue backs up. Once airside, the gate area is compact: a ten-minute walk covers the farthest ends. No inter-terminal transfers, no shuttle buses, no guessing which building to enter.
easyJet's check-in counters take up a large section of the departures hall. The arrivals hall is small and exits directly to the tram stop and bus stance. You can be on transport into the city within five minutes of collecting your bag.
Which Airlines Fly Which Pairs
British Airways serve both LHR and LCY to EDI — 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.
A319, A320
E190
737-800
A320
A319, A320