Manchester, United Kingdom · MAN · #1 in this comparison
Manchester Airport
2 terminals (T2 & T3) · 32M+ passengers/year
How good is Manchester Airport?
Manchester Airport (MAN) scores 7.4/10 (Very Good) on FlightLogic's airport index — combining on-time performance (7.2), passenger experience (7.5), and facilities (7.5). Lounge quality rates 7.1/10. See full airport guide →
In short
Manchester (MAN) is the UK's third-busiest airport and the main hub for northern England, handling around 32 million passengers through two terminals after a £1.3bn redevelopment. Long-haul routes include Singapore Airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways, and Virgin Atlantic. Rail and tram access direct into the terminal building is a genuine advantage. UK261 covers all departing MAN flights for delay compensation.
Score breakdown
Modelled on industry airport indices — on-time data, facilities ratings, and editorial experience signals combined into a single FlightLogic score.
Highlights
- Now operates from two terminals after Terminal 1 closed as part of a £1.3bn redevelopment; Terminal 2 (the "super terminal") now handles roughly 75% of traffic
- Lounge options include the Escape Lounge and Aspire Lounge in Terminal 2, plus a new "Executive by Escape Lounge"; Terminal 3 has its own Escape Lounge
- The Station combines National Rail (Northern, TransPennine Express, Transport for Wales) and Manchester Metrolink tram services under one roof, with trains to Manchester Piccadilly roughly every 10 minutes
Overview
The UK's third-busiest airport and the primary gateway to the North of England, Manchester Airport handles around 32 million passengers a year through its terminals following a £1.3 billion transformation programme. Its standout advantage is direct rail and Metrolink tram access straight into the terminal building, making it one of the best-connected airports in Britain.
Terminals and the £1.3bn transformation
Manchester's multi-year Transformation Programme has consolidated operations around an expanded Terminal 2 — the "super terminal" — which now handles the majority of flights including most long-haul and full-service carriers. Terminal 3 continues to serve a mix of short-haul and legacy carriers, while the original Terminal 1 has been retired as part of the redevelopment. Confirm your terminal before travelling, as they are a walk apart.
The rebuilt Terminal 2 brings wider security halls, more automated e-gates, and a larger airside retail and dining offering, addressing the queue and capacity complaints that historically dragged Manchester's passenger-experience scores below the top UK airports.
The North of England's long-haul gateway
Manchester is by some distance the UK's largest airport outside London for intercontinental connectivity. Emirates operates multiple daily A380 services to Dubai, and Singapore Airlines, Qatar Airways, Etihad, Virgin Atlantic, and Saudia all fly long-haul from MAN — meaning travellers across the North can reach Asia, the Gulf, and North America without transiting through Heathrow or Amsterdam.
This long-haul depth, combined with a strong easyJet, Ryanair, Jet2, and TUI short-haul base, makes Manchester unusually well-rounded for a regional airport and the practical home airport for much of northern England and North Wales.
Direct rail and tram access
Manchester's standout feature is The Station — an integrated transport interchange connected to the terminals by the covered Skylink walkway, combining National Rail and Metrolink tram services under one roof. Trains reach Manchester Piccadilly in roughly 15–20 minutes and run to destinations across the North and into North Wales, while the tram connects directly to the city centre and suburbs.
This direct, weather-protected rail and tram link straight into the terminal building is a genuine advantage over airports that rely on shuttle buses or distant stations, and it is a major reason Manchester rates as one of the best-connected airports in Britain.