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Review: a British Airways day trip to Gibraltar

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This is our review of a British Airways day trip to Gibraltar.

There are very few places at the moment that have no entry restrictions on arrival (such as quarantine or a requirement to show a PCR test) or upon returning to the UK.

Gibraltar is one of them, and reader Matthias recently decided to go for a same-day break. Coupled with the unique Gibraltar airport experience we thought it would make an interesting piece.

Worlds best departure lounge Gibraltar

Over to Matthias:

“Desperate for a trip out of the UK but short on time, I’d been watching the UK ‘travel corridor’ list during lockdown, hoping for a lucky break.

None came (unfortunately my budget does not extend to private jets to Bhutan or Botswana!). The only destination left without the need for quarantine or test in either direction was the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar.

I’d visited Gibraltar once, 20 years ago, and my memories weren’t the best – aggressive monkeys and run-down pubs seemingly the only thing I could remember.

Airport from Moorish Castle Gibraltar

I figured at the very minimum it would be a fun flying experience. Gibraltar Airport usually ranks high in a list of ‘exciting airports’ due to its unique characteristics:

  • The short runway has water at both ends
  • The main road into town actually crosses the runway so must be closed every time a plane lands or departs
  • You get great view of the Rock on either departure or landing, depending on prevailing wind conditions and a judicious choice of seat

Conveniently, British Airways runs double daily Heathrow – Gibraltar flights on certain days, allowing a long day trip with around 6.5 hours on the ground. I got a great deal at under £80 return booked a month out, although I did notice the prices were nearer to £500 just before departure.

(Wizz Air has also just launched flights from Luton if you want another option. They depart at 13.40 every Monday and Friday.)

Sadly the flight time is just too short for an 160 tier point Club Europe run. This meant I stayed in Euro Traveller despite BA’s best efforts to sell me an upgrade.

The morning flight is quite early at 7.10am but has the benefit of getting you to a pleasantly warm Gibraltar by 11.00.

The flight was packed but immigration was efficient as long as you showed the barcode proving your completion of the online health form.

Because Gibraltar is less than 7 square km or 3 square miles, the airport is literally next to town. You can walk to Casemates Square in around 15 minutes including, of course, the crossing of the runway!

Alternatively, there are taxis and buses, although these can be slow as traffic seemed to be generally quite terrible.

Top Of The Rock Gibraltar
The original Top of the Rock

Things to do & see in Gibraltar

Gibraltar is, of course, mainly known for the Rock. This is where all the main sights are, which I’d decided to visit first before ending back in town for a walk and pitstop.

You need to buy a Nature Reserve ticket to access the Rock, but as this included entry to all the sights it was a real bargain at £13 considering the variety and quality of the attractions. Even if you’re not interested in military history, reading about the Moors, Spaniards, Brits and others fighting for the Rock is thoroughly engrossing.

Suspension bridge with Gibraltar town in the background
The Windsor Suspension Bridge

I started off at the Moorish Castle (really only a tower, but a very old one and with a nice bonus view of the airport). I progressed to the Great Siege Tunnels (fascinating and superbly refurbished), the new Windsor Suspension Bridge (mildly scary) and the Mediterranean Steps up the steepest part of the Rock, but with great views along the way.

After my first encounter with the famous Barbary macaque monkeys – who truly have no fear and can be mildly intimidating – I made my way past O’Haras Battery to St Michael’s Cave, bigger than expected and beautifully showcased in son-et-lumiere.

After a fleeting visit to the new but unimpressive Skywalk, I finished at the top station of the rickety old Cable Car, which whisked me back into town in a couple of minutes.

Cable Car Gibraltar

Rather unhelpfully, seeing all the sights involves a fair bit of backtracking and ups and downs, so I ended up covering around 10km and 1,000m climb. I wouldn’t recommend this unless you are keen on some serious exercise. I did it running, with a backpack. Everyone’s crazy in their own way.

For a more comfortable experience, you could either leave out the odd landmark, start with a taxi to the far end, rent e-bikes or hire a tour guide who will gladly ferry you around in a car or minibus.

The alternative is to split your visit over a couple of days – any more and you’ll be bored, unless you’re once again allowed to cross the nearby border into Spain without triggering quarantine.

From the bottom of the cable car station, it’s a short stroll into Gibraltar town, which after an ‘extensive beautification programme’ now boasts the wonderfully pedestrianised Main Street. You can amble this back to Casemates Square for an alfresco pint and some tapas.

Casemates Square Gibraltar

Soon enough it was time to walk back to the airport, making sure I crossed the runway before the inbound flight.

After gliding through security in the beautiful but rather over-specced airport building, I was pleased to hear that the business lounge had reopened. I was less pleased to hear that British Airways had stopped paying for access so that my Silver card was useless.

Instead of paying the (surprisingly reasonable) £13 access fee, I grabbed a beer from the main bar and sat on the balcony, watching my plane come in with the Rock as backdrop.

As night fell, there was one last highlight to come. Due to the westerly winds, the plane would take off into the Bay of Algeciras and do a full circle around the Rock before heading back home.

The view from the left-hand side really was something else and almost made up for the absence of a G&T!

I’ll be honest that the flight back dragged on a bit, but when I arrived back home roughly 16 hours after I’d left, I concluded that it had definitely been worth it.”


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Comments (109)

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

  • James Vickers says:

    One of the few trips we managed to complete successfully in August this year! The balcony at the airport is great whilst waiting for a flight. I really enjoyed the botanical gardens as well. I’ve only ever visited in August and it does sometimes feel scorching hot with the enclosed nature of the place so thinking out of summer next time!

  • William Kerr says:

    that was a really useful and interesting article for future use. – thank youn

  • John says:

    Did this last year but was cheaper to get the flight back next morning and mattress run the holiday inn express. I needed 5 TPs and I hadn’t finished exploring the entire rock on my previous trips. Also breakfast in CX loungewas always welcome.

    You can avoid paying the hikers entry fee if you come from the south.

    It’s probably ok in December but I was very glad that I had the chance to have a shower after my hike in November rather than going straight onto a 3 hour flight, and no G&T as driving

    • Matthias (author) says:

      You could probably sneak around the fee if only hiking, but you’ll need it if you wanted to see any of the sights, in which case it’s very good value.

      • John says:

        Yes you’re right, I saw all the sights on my first trip (when the entry fees were low/nil) then on this trip I noticed they had built a lot of new stuff, which I guess they need to pay for!

  • Mike says:

    What a smashing day out – thank you for sharing it with us all

    • Alex Sm says:

      Oh yes, a lot of inspiration for a possible future trip to retrace the steps of Matthias (and Lisbeth Salander!)

  • Archie says:

    Surprised read that GIB lounge was refusing access to BA passengers. Certainly not the case on my last visit on the 25 Oct 2020. Limited food options (mainly sandwiches), but fair drink selection and nice outdoor area overlooking the runway.

    Recently booked another trip to GIB at the end of March 2021 which is showing departure from LHR T3 – I’ve missed the CX lounge! Let’s hope the dispute between BA and the Gibraltar lounge operator gets resolved soon.

    • John says:

      This is not a BA lounge but I heard the Jersey BA lounge is refusing access to BA passengers

      • David says:

        The JER lounge isn’t BA either. It’s a contract lounge.

        • Matthias (author) says:

          Hi, I spoke to the lounge manager who said BA had informed her in early November that they’d stop paying for premium customer access. So it’s purely a cost saving measure. The view from the terrace made up for it somewhat!

  • Sapiens says:

    Great read, thanks for sharing

  • David says:

    Just hope there isn’t a diversion to Spain, which could mean a quarantine on the way back. It happens from time to time due to high winds in the Straits.

    • David says:

      Any recent diverted flights have just waited briefly on the ground and flown to GIB from AGP rather than coaching to avoid this issue. There is usually a change to problematic weather relatively quickly.

      • Ed says:

        This wasn’t the case on Monday. The BA rotation stayed in AGP, with busses from GIB.

        • Matthias (author) says:

          Yes I was slightly worried about that, especially as there were strong winds the day I went (there often are.) But I was quite confident having looked at previous days’ flights – one did a go around but all landed at GIB – and because the wind was W-E so exactly parallel to the runway.

          But yes there is a small risk on windy days.

  • Chris Heyes says:

    Well done, Matthias, Gibraltar is one of those places you want to do !
    But only once ! Admittedly long while ago, but it’s so small what could possibly have changed
    But again Matthias well done very interesting article, good read
    did i read it’s your 2nd visit lol (sorry Gibraltar residents)
    Maybe one day not quite enough, but no more than two lol

    • David says:

      A lot has changed.
      And lots of the stereotypes were wrong/flawed to begin with.

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