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British Airways cancels all Gatwick short-haul flights for July and August

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British Airways appears to have cancelled all of its London Gatwick short-haul services for July, August and early September.

It seems – although it isn’t fully clear – that the most flights have either been transferred to Heathrow, retaining the same flight number, or merged with an existing Heathrow flight on the same day.  Some routes will be cancelled outright for the rest of the Summer season, including Almeria, Antalya and Bergamo.

British Airways cancels all Gatwick short-haul flights for July and August

If your flight has been affected, check ‘Manage My Booking’.  In particular, you may have lost any existing seat reservations and will need to select again.

Flights return to Gatwick from 8th September although this is clearly subject to change.

Some long-haul flights ARE still scheduled to depart from Gatwick to the Caribbean in late July.  It is likely that these will depart from the North Terminal as the South Terminal, used primarily by British Airways, remains closed.

The scheduled flights are:

  • Bermuda – 2 per week from 17th July
  • Bridgetown, Barbados – 2 per week from 18th July
  • Kingston, Jamaica – 2 per week from 20th July
  • St Lucia – 1 per week from 25th July

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Comments (49)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Steve R says:

    We’ve got RFS fro next month – It says to phone them, usual message . you may have a longer wait time than usual, then promptly hangs up.

    BA trying tp copy Ryanair

  • DMW says:

    I’ve got BA long-haul booked from LGW in September. Not yet(?) moved to LHR.
    Do you think it’s only a matter of time before it’s moved? (assuming it’s not cancelled outright if Caribbean borders don’t open)

    • pauldb says:

      Not necessarily. The switch so far has been short haul only. Rob has suggested BA don’t have adequate (socially distanced) capacity at T5 to move everything.

  • Andrew (@andrewseftel) says:

    Solid offer from Shangri-La. I calculate that to be a 28% rebate to spend on dining if you have Jade through Amex Plat.

    • tony says:

      I’m not so sure the offer is that great. Am convinced they ran a treble points promo just a couple of years back, and doubles have been very much standard for many summer seasons. Given the state of the global economy I’d have hoped they would be a bit more generous than that (although with my Asia trip in tatters, I can’t see me staying in a SL before the offer expires anyway).

  • D* says:

    Rob has reported from the beginning that Norwegian would not fly long-haul until April 2021. However they were still selling flights to US for September dates until a few weeks ago, although now they are showing flights from December. Is the April date correct, and therefore Norwegian is purposefully selling tickets for flights it will not be operating?

    • Marcw says:

      That’s just their plan – but it’s a flexible plan. They might bring forward this April date. On the other hand, their initial plan was to only fly Norwegian domestic flights. Today, 1st July, Norwegian restated international connections from OslO, Stockholm and Copenhagen to different European cities, including London and Barcelona.
      So it’s all very fluid and flexible.

      My two cents… I actually don’t think their will be a major long haul traffic until at least spring 2021, globally.

  • Kai says:

    If you dine at the Shangri-la’s Ting restaurant, beware that they’ll try their best not to honour the 25% bonus when you use your points. That’s the experience of many of my friends.

  • Nori says:

    BA avios RFS flight moved from LGW to LHR – the same flight number and times. Can I cancel for a full refund or because it’s the same flight number, I’ll have to pay the £35 fee? Just would like to clarify this.

    • Neil Donoghue says:

      Just BA pulling a fast one! My Ibiza flights were moved and I got a full cash refund. Don’t see why you shouldn’t as well.

      • Nori says:

        Thanks Neil, good to know before I call them to argue my case.

      • Nori says:

        Thank you very much Rhys

      • Nori says:

        I’ve one more question. I used the Lloyds upgrade voucher. Usually it would be lost. What happens to it if I choose to take a refund in this case?

      • jc says:

        There’s more to it than that. Article 8 Section 3 gives you the right to be taken to the other airport… but I thought OP was asking about whether they can take a full refund instead. I’d say yes, since the old flight is considered cancelled. Rerouting to the LHR flight is only one of your 3 choices (from Article 8 1 (b)) – you can choose (a) or (c) instead.

        • Rhys says:

          There’s more to it but it’s a good starting point.

      • pauldb says:

        My affected bookings say in MMB I can have a full refund, so BA aren’t being difficult. (Actually I think there are arguments they could use to deny refunds if they wanted to.)

  • AndyGWP says:

    “Qatar Airways has been the most outspoken, with CEO Akbar al-Baker threatening Airbus and Boeing not to resist aircraft deferrals or the airline would “not do business with them again.””

    Forgive my lack of knowledge re: commercial aircraft, but if he refused to do business with Airbus and Boeing again, what other options would there be for Qatar?

    • Rhys says:

      Well quite!

    • Callum says:

      He wouldn’t refuse to do business with both of them. The strategy would appear to be that one of them will cave.

    • Josh says:

      They could take some ex-Soviet aircraft from North Korea or Cuba perhaps

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Stick with a fleet that isn’t actually that old.

  • Matt says:

    “…as the coronavirus pandemic *crashes* demand for air travel.”

    Eek, unusual word choice for an air travel site! 😬

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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