Late Arrival Planner

Late-night arrival planning

Late arrival planner for Heathrow and Gatwick

Landing late in London can turn a simple transfer into a stressful decision. Use this planner to work out whether you should stay near the airport, continue into London tonight, or choose a direct transfer based on arrival time, luggage, confidence level, and how complex the final leg will feel after a long flight.

After 10pm After midnight Airport hotel vs London Heavy luggage First time in London
10pm–5am
Built for the hours when transport choices get narrower, confidence matters more, and one bad decision can make the whole arrival feel harder.
30–45 sec
A fast decision layer that helps you narrow the safest and least stressful next step without overthinking every option.
Lower-stress by design
Balances timing, luggage, first-time visitor uncertainty, and whether saving a little money is still worth the extra friction.
Start here

Choose the safest next step after your flight lands

This planner is designed for one practical question: should you continue tonight, sleep near the airport, or pay for a smoother finish? It is most useful when you are landing late, feel tired, have bags, are traveling with family, or simply do not want to solve London transport at the most inconvenient hour.

Use journey planner Ask Thomas

This planner is designed for one practical question: should you continue tonight, sleep near the airport, or pay for a smoother finish? It is most useful when you are landing late, feel tired, have bags, are traveling with family, or simply do not want to solve London transport at the most inconvenient hour.

Best for after midnight

When public transport stops feeling worth it

Once your arrival pushes deeper into the night, the total cost of a “cheap” route starts to include more than money. Waiting on platforms, managing bags, navigating unfamiliar stations, and worrying about the final connection can make an airport hotel or direct car the smarter choice even if it costs more.

Best for reassurance

When staying airport-side is the smart move

Sleeping near the airport is often the best decision when you are landing very late, have children, are carrying heavy luggage, or do not need to be in central London immediately. It gives you a clean reset, lowers the chance of confusion, and usually makes the next morning feel much easier.

Best for still continuing

When private transfer is the cleaner finish

If you still want to reach your hotel tonight, a direct transfer often becomes the cleanest answer. It removes late-platform uncertainty, reduces decision fatigue, and gets you from airport to door with fewer moving parts than rail-plus-tube or coach-plus-taxi combinations.

Frequently asked questions

When should I stay at the airport instead of continuing into London?
Airport-side stays usually make the most sense when you land after midnight, are arriving for the first time, have checked bags, are traveling with children, or do not need to be somewhere specific first thing in the morning. In those situations, reducing friction is often more valuable than forcing one more journey into the night.
Is private transfer worth it late at night?
It often is. Late at night, the value of a direct car is not just speed. It is certainty. You avoid missed connections, station confusion, extra walking, and the risk that the final leg to your hotel becomes the hardest part of the day. For tired travelers, couples with luggage, families, or late hotel arrivals, that extra cost can be worth it.
What is the safest default if I am unsure?
If you are landing very late, carrying luggage, or arriving in London for the first time, the safest default is usually either an airport hotel or a direct transfer. Both options reduce uncertainty. Public transport may still be possible, but it is often the better choice only when you are arriving early enough, traveling light, and feel comfortable navigating London at night.