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The 30 biggest airports in Britain have been ranked from best to worst

In a Telegraph ranking of UK air hubs, one northern airport was lauded for short security queues, few cancellations, and timeliness

Annie McNamee
Written by
Annie McNamee
Contributor, Time Out London and UK
Plane taking off from London City Airport
Photograph: Shutterstock
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We’ve all had a nightmare experience in an airport. The queue at security was long, your flight was delayed by several hours, and your go-to airport food kiosk was out of the one sandwich you wanted. You might expect the airport to be the worst part of any given journey, but it doesn’t need to be that way.

Any frequent flier will know that small airports generally offer more pleasant experiences than huge ones. Sure, they might only consist of one room, a WH Smith and, if you’re really lucky, a mini café, but their compact size often means that things run on time. All of that stands true for the airport which the Telegraph has crowned the best in the UK.

In order to determine the country’s best airport, the Telegraph took a closer look at the 30 biggest terminals in the country and compared them on a few different criteria: punctuality (percentage of flights arriving and leaving on time), average delay times, average security times, and flight cancellation rates. Once they had all of those numbers, they gave each entry an overall total score, the higher the better, and voilà – you have your ranking.

So who took the crown? The small but mighty Liverpool John Lennon. Serving around 5 million passengers annually (for context, Heathrow sees more than 83 million each year), travelling through this mid-size northern hub will keep you well on time. Its cancellation rates sit at an impressive 0.7 percent, and 76 percent of flights arrive or depart on schedule. This isn’t the first time Liverpool John Lennon has been recognised for excellence, as consumer site Which? also named it the nation’s best earlier this year.

In second place was Belfast George Best, which is about half of the size of Liverpool John Lennon but nearly matches it in efficiency. It actually beat the winner in some categories: over 78 percent of planes take off or land on time here. It narrowly missed out on the top spot because of its limited destinations, only flying to 22 places.

In third was London City, the capital’s most compact terminus. It flew into the bronze spot, losing out because of its 3.3 percent cancellation rate.

On the other end of the league table, Cardiff came in last place. If you’re travelling on public transport, it’s often actually faster to get into Cardiff city centre from Bristol airport than Cardiff itself, so it’s incredibly inconvenient to even get to. Then, once you do arrive, you’re more likely to encounter delays and cancellations. That said, Bristol didn’t do too well in the study either. The southwestern hub placed 27th out of 30. 

Every big airport in the UK, ranked from best to worst

Here are Britain’s top 30 biggest airports, ranked from best to worst according to the Telegraph

  1. Liverpool John Lennon
  2. George Best Belfast City
  3. London City
  4. London Heathrow
  5. Newcastle International
  6. London Gatwick
  7. Birmingham
  8. Inverness
  9. Aberdeen International
  10. Jersey
  11. Edinburgh
  12. Southampton
  13. Manchester
  14. Glasgow
  15. Cornwall Newquay
  16. East Midlands
  17. Isle of Man
  18. London Luton
  19. Belfast International
  20. Norwich
  21. Guernsey
  22. Bournemouth
  23. Leeds Bradford
  24. Exeter
  25. London Southend
  26. Sumburgh
  27. Bristol
  28. Glasgow Prestwick
  29. London Stansted
  30. Cardiff

You can find the Telegraph’s full rating of all 30 of our biggest airports in full detail here.

Eyes on the skies

Wondering what else is going on in the world of British aviation? Low-cost airline Wizz Air is launching five new routes between the UK and Spain, and this is why British Airways might be scrapping the backseat screens. And that’s not the only news: several major British airports have officially scrapped the 100ml liquids rule. In fact, 10 UK airports have changed security rules around liquids in hang luggage –here’s everything you need to know

Three regional UK airports are getting new flights and holiday routes

Could Concorde soon make a comeback in the UK?

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