London, United Kingdom · LGW · #1 in this comparison
London Gatwick Airport
North & South terminals · 43M+ passengers/year
How good is London Gatwick Airport?
London Gatwick Airport (LGW) scores 6.8/10 (Good) on FlightLogic's airport index — combining on-time performance (6.5), passenger experience (6.7), and facilities (7.2). Lounge quality rates 6.5/10. See full airport guide →
In short
Gatwick (LGW) is London's second airport with North and South Terminals linked by a free shuttle. It handles mainly leisure and low-cost traffic (easyJet, TUI, Jet2, Virgin on select routes). The Gatwick Express reaches Victoria in ~30 minutes. Lounge options include No1 Lounge in both terminals (Priority Pass eligible, but pre-book at peak times). UK261 applies to all departing Gatwick flights.
Score breakdown
Modelled on industry airport indices — on-time data, facilities ratings, and editorial experience signals combined into a single FlightLogic score.
Highlights
- World's busiest single-runway airport, handling roughly 43 million passengers in 2025, split across North and South Terminals linked by a free shuttle
- South Terminal train station offers the non-stop Gatwick Express to London Victoria (as fast as ~30 minutes) plus Southern and Thameslink services
- Ten lounges across both terminals, including No1 Lounge (South and North), Club Aspire South, and Plaza Premium North with panoramic runway views
Overview
Gatwick is London's second airport and the world's busiest single-runway airport, moving passengers efficiently between its North and South Terminals via a free shuttle, with the South Terminal train station offering fast rail access into central London. It holds a solid but unspectacular rating, reflecting decent facilities and lounges that trail Heathrow's premium offering.
Terminals and getting around Gatwick
Gatwick operates two terminals — North and South — connected by a free, fully automated shuttle train that takes about two minutes. The South Terminal is the busier of the two and houses the railway station, so most passengers arriving by train start there. easyJet, Gatwick's dominant carrier, splits operations across both terminals, so always check which one your flight departs from before arriving.
As the world's busiest single-runway airport, Gatwick runs a tightly scheduled operation. Security can be busy at peak leisure times (early mornings and school holidays), so the airport recommends arriving two to three hours before departure. Both terminals offer fast-track security for a fee or via premium tickets and select lounges.
Getting to and from London
The Gatwick Express runs non-stop to London Victoria in around 30 minutes, while Thameslink services connect directly to London Bridge, Blackfriars, St Pancras, and on to Luton — useful for cross-London and airport-to-airport journeys without changing. Southern services add more central and south London stops at lower fares. The station sits inside the South Terminal.
National Express and other coaches serve Gatwick from across the UK, and the airport is directly on the M23/M25 motorway network. Rail is almost always faster and cheaper than a taxi to central London, which can take over an hour in traffic and cost significantly more.
Lounges and where Gatwick sits versus Heathrow
Gatwick's lounge scene is independent-led rather than airline-flagship: the No1 Lounge (both terminals), Clubrooms, My Lounge, and the Grain Store are the main options, most accepting Priority Pass, DragonPass, or paid day passes. British Airways operates a lounge in the South Terminal for its short-haul premium and status passengers. None match the scale of Heathrow's BA Concorde Room or Virgin Clubhouse.
For a like-for-like decision between London's two main airports, see our Gatwick vs Heathrow comparison. In short: Heathrow wins on long-haul network, premium lounges, and connection options; Gatwick often wins on leisure routes, lower parking costs, and a simpler two-terminal layout.