British Airways Just Axed 19 Routes — Gatwick Bleeds, Heathrow Wins

von | 20. Mai 2026 | Luftfahrtwelt, Nachricht | 0 Kommentare

Cape Town, Las Vegas, JFK, Aruba, Jeddah, Kuwait, Costa Rica’s San José — and eleven European short-hops including Cologne, Grenoble, Izmir, Riga and Kalamata.

British Airways is dropping nineteen routes from its summer 2026 timetable. Seven long-haul, twelve short-haul, one strategic pivot: BA is consolidating ruthlessly on Heathrow, and abandoning the idea that Gatwick is a real long-haul base.

For passengers the cuts emerged not in a single announcement but from the schedule data itself. For the airline industry it is the most aggressive structural realignment of a European flag carrier since airberlin’s Düsseldorf long-haul operation vanished with that airline’s collapse in 2017.

Kurzinfo

Total routes cut: 19 (7 long-haul, 11 short-haul from London, plus CityFlyer’s Edinburgh–Olbia)

Effective period: June 2026 — March 2027

Heathrow long-haul: Jeddah, Kuwait dropped (returning to Heathrow consolidation)

Gatwick long-haul: Aruba, Cape Town, Las Vegas, JFK, San José Costa Rica all dropped

Short-haul European: Cologne, Grenoble, Izmir, Riga, Kalamata and others

Strategic rationale: Heathrow consolidation; record 50 daily US services this summer

What Heathrow Wins, Gatwick Loses

The most striking single fact about BA’s cut list is that all but two of the long-haul casualties are Gatwick services. Aruba — gone. Cape Town from Gatwick — gone. Las Vegas — gone. JFK from Gatwick (BA flies the route from Heathrow as well) — gone. San José, Costa Rica — gone.

This is not BA leaving the markets. BA still flies to Cape Town, Las Vegas and JFK. It just flies them all out of Heathrow now. The Gatwick long-haul model — same-day connections at a secondary London airport — has been quietly dying for a decade, and the 2026 timetable is the formal funeral.

British Airways Boeing 777
BA’s long-haul fleet is consolidating around Heathrow — Gatwick widebody services are being progressively removed.

Gatwick will keep its BA short-haul presence and a handful of leisure long-haul routes (Caribbean beach destinations, mostly). But the strategic story is unambiguous: Heathrow is BA’s only real long-haul hub, and the airline is now structurally honest about it.

Why Jeddah and Kuwait Hurt

The two Heathrow casualties on the list are the more interesting story. BA has flown Heathrow-Kuwait for sixty years — one of the carrier’s most enduring Gulf routes. Jeddah was reopened in November 2024 after a 2020 pandemic-era cancellation, and now closes again less than eighteen months later.

The pattern is the new face of European long-haul: Gulf markets that look excellent on paper but cannot compete with the cost base of Emirates and Etihad. BA’s strategy is to retreat from routes where Middle Eastern carriers offer better aircraft, better service and lower fares, and double-down on transatlantic services where the cost geometry still works.

These changes reflect our continued strategy of focusing investment at Heathrow, where we are operating a record 50 daily services to the United States this summer. Passengers will continue to enjoy access to nearly all current destinations through our hub network.
— British Airways network planning statement, summarised by Simple Flying and Travel and Tour World, May 2026

The European Short-Haul Cull

The eleven European cuts are easier to explain. Cologne, Grenoble, Izmir, Riga, Kalamata and the others are routes where Wizz, Ryanair and easyJet have systematically undercut BA on price for a decade. The Brexit cost squeeze on UK airlines has made matching low-cost-carrier economics impossible for legacy operators.

BA’s short-haul European retreat is not new — it has been quietly trimming these routes for years. But eleven cuts surfacing at once in the schedules is the kind of retrenchment a flag carrier only makes when it has decided to compete in a different market entirely.

Verwandte Fragen

Which routes is British Airways cutting in 2026?

British Airways is dropping 19 routes from its summer 2026 schedule — seven long-haul and twelve short-haul. Axed destinations include Cape Town, Las Vegas, Aruba, Jeddah, Kuwait and Costa Rica's San José, plus European short-hops such as Cologne, Grenoble, Izmir, Riga and Kalamata, with the cuts effective from June 2026 through March 2027.

Why is British Airways cutting routes from Gatwick?

BA is consolidating its long-haul flying at Heathrow and stepping back from the idea of London Gatwick as a serious long-haul base. The move concentrates premium traffic and aircraft at its main hub. Other carriers are filling the gap, such as Norse Atlantic's new Gatwick-to-Phuket service.

Is British Airways leaving London Gatwick entirely?

No. BA is abandoning much of its Gatwick long-haul network but keeps short-haul and leisure flying there. The shift is a structural realignment toward Heathrow rather than a full withdrawal. Meanwhile rivals are expanding at Gatwick, including AirAsia X's return to London after 14 years.

When do the British Airways route cuts take effect?

The cancellations roll out across the summer 2026 timetable and into the following winter, spanning roughly June 2026 to March 2027. Some routes end immediately while others are not renewed for the new season, so affected passengers are being re-accommodated or refunded depending on the route.

How significant is this British Airways restructuring?

It is described as the most aggressive structural realignment of a European flag carrier since airberlin's Düsseldorf long-haul operation vanished with that airline's 2017 collapse. Cutting 19 routes at once and effectively conceding Gatwick as a long-haul base marks a major strategic retreat to Heathrow.

Which destinations does British Airways still serve from London?

BA continues to operate an extensive long-haul network from Heathrow, where it is consolidating its widebody fleet and premium routes. The 2026 cuts mainly remove Gatwick long-haul services and a handful of thinner European short-hauls, leaving the core Heathrow operation intact and strengthened.

British Airways A320neo at Heathrow Terminal 5
A British Airways A320neo at Heathrow Terminal 5, the airline's primary hub for both short-haul and long-haul operations. (Wikimedia Commons)

What the Market Will Remember

BA’s cuts will affect roughly two million passengers per year. The competing carriers — Virgin Atlantic on the transatlantic, Emirates on the Gulf, easyJet on the European leisure runs — will absorb most of them. London will not become a smaller air-travel market because of these changes; it will just become a more concentrated one.

For BA itself, the bet is that fewer routes flown harder, with more daily frequencies on the routes that remain, generates more revenue per available seat-kilometre than spreading thinly across a network designed in the 2010s. Time will tell. By March 2027 the timetable will tell us whether the gamble worked.

Sources: Simple Flying; Travel and Tour World; The Times; BA Network Planning press materials.

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