(LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM) British Airways will cut four London routes in late 2025, ending services from Heathrow to Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen, Grenoble and Nuremberg on October 26, 2025, and closing its London Gatwick to New York JFK link a day earlier on October 25, 2025. The moves, confirmed by industry updates tracking the airline’s winter 2025 schedule, will shift aircraft toward higher-demand markets while trimming services that have struggled for traffic or aircraft availability.
The airline’s London routes to Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen (SAW), Grenoble (GNB) and Nuremberg (NUE) will each see a final flight date on October 26, 2025, while the daily Gatwick–JFK service ends on October 25, 2025 and will not return in spring 2026. The changes affect a mix of leisure and business traffic, closing a relatively new Istanbul alternative launched in 2023, removing a winter ski-season link to the French Alps, and cutting a shorter European business route to Bavaria, alongside ending Gatwick’s last British Airways transatlantic run to New York.

The carrier’s decision follows months of network adjustments tied to aircraft shortages, including ongoing Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engine issues that have grounded several Boeing 787s, and a broader strategy to prioritise core, higher-performing markets. Industry reports tracking the airline’s schedule changes said the cuts respond to weaker demand on specific routes and the need to redeploy planes to stronger corridors. An industry update stated:
“Both routes have been removed from future schedules and are no longer available for booking on the airline’s website,”
referring to the Heathrow–SAW and Heathrow–GNB services.
The Heathrow–Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen link, launched in June 2023 as a lower-cost alternative to Istanbul Airport (IST), struggled to gain share against low-cost competitors on the Asian side of the city, including Pegasus Airlines. British Airways will continue to serve Istanbul via IST only, keeping a primary gateway for business and connecting traffic while dropping its secondary city airport option. Flyers heading to the Turkish metropolis will still find daily choices via IST once SAW ends on October 26, 2025.
On the winter leisure side, the Heathrow–Grenoble cut trims a seasonal ski route that traditionally targeted December-to-March demand into the French Alps. The removal points to a narrowed focus on stronger winter performers such as Geneva, Innsbruck and Zurich, where yields and load factors have been more resilient, according to industry watchers. Grenoble operated as a niche schedule, and its final flight date aligns with British Airways’ broader consolidation at the end of the summer timetable.
Nuremberg’s removal from Heathrow further streamlines the airline’s short-haul German footprint before winter 2025. The Bavaria route has been included in the network reductions tracked by aviation forums following the carrier’s schedule uploads. A forum summary captured the change plainly:
“BA will cut the following routes: LHR-SAW LHR-GNB LHR-NUE.”
The most visible change for transatlantic travelers is the Gatwick–JFK cancellation. British Airways has flown the route as a daily service, typically pausing it in winter and resuming in spring, but will now end it entirely from late October and keep all its New York flying from Heathrow. A consumer travel report noted:
“BA has announced it will scrap its popular route between London Gatwick and New York (JFK) later this year… from October 25 will cease to operate. BA usually pauses this route for the winter, between October and March, but has said next year it won’t return in the spring as usual.”
From Heathrow, British Airways plans nine daily flights to JFK, maintaining a heavy schedule on the key business corridor even as it consolidates at one London airport.
Gatwick will not lose its New York link completely. Delta Air Lines and Norse Atlantic will continue to operate Gatwick–JFK, providing alternatives for South London and south-of-England passengers who prefer or need to avoid Heathrow. But for British Airways loyalists, the carrier’s consolidation means heading across town to Heathrow if they want to remain within the airline’s network, alliance benefits and frequent flyer ecosystem to New York.
British Airways’ decisions reflect the pressure of aircraft availability and the cost of flying marginal routes when spare planes are scarce. The Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engine problems affecting parts of the global 787 fleet have persisted and forced ongoing maintenance schedules, limiting aircraft time. With fewer long-haul frames available, airlines have prioritised their most profitable routes. That squeeze, combined with competitive pricing headwinds on certain city pairs, has made lower-yield services—like an Istanbul secondary airport—increasingly hard to justify.
The airline is reallocating capacity to routes with stronger year-round demand and better financial performance, industry reports say. In practice, that means more seats on high-traffic corridors such as Heathrow–JFK and a continued buildout of key European business and leisure markets, while trimming thinner winter-only runs and overlapping secondary-city options. The end of the Gatwick–JFK service also simplifies fleet and crew planning by limiting transatlantic operations to Heathrow, where British Airways can concentrate resources and connections.
For customers, the near-term impact is about rebooking and route choice. A notice in industry coverage stated:
“Customers with existing bookings beyond October 26, 2025, on either route will likely be rebooked onto alternative services. Istanbul-bound travelers will still have daily options via Istanbul Airport (IST).”
Travelers holding tickets after the final flight date on any of the four routes are expected to be offered alternatives on British Airways’ remaining network, or refunds under normal policies. Passengers can consult the UK Civil Aviation Authority’s consumer rules on cancellations and rerouting, which set out airlines’ obligations on refunds and alternative travel options; guidance is available via the UK Civil Aviation Authority passenger rights on delays and cancellations.
The Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen exit underscores how hard it is to make a secondary-airport strategy work in a price-sensitive market dominated by low-cost carriers. SAW sits across the city from IST, and while it can offer lower operating costs, passengers connect more easily at the main hub, where British Airways’ partner and alliance options are broader. The Heathrow–IST service remains the flagship link to Turkey’s largest city, and its daily schedule will absorb customers who might otherwise have flown SAW.
Grenoble’s removal will be felt most by winter sports travelers looking for direct Heathrow access to the Alps. British Airways’ emphasis on Geneva, Innsbruck and Zurich suggests it will concentrate ski capacity where it can fill larger planes at higher fares while offering robust frequencies. Grenoble can still be reached via other carriers or via British Airways through nearby gateways, but the direct option from Heathrow ends on October 26, 2025.
In Germany, Nuremberg’s cut narrows choices from Heathrow into Bavaria beyond Munich. Business travelers may shift to Munich or connect onward inside Germany. The change illustrates how the airline is pruning thinner European city pairs to balance aircraft hours, crew rosters and maintenance windows as it plans the 2025–26 winter season.
Gatwick’s transatlantic footprint has shrunk in recent years as British Airways concentrated on its primary hub at Heathrow. Keeping nine daily Heathrow–JFK flights offers schedule depth attractive to corporate contracts, frequent flyers and premium-cabin travelers, the group that underpins profitability on the North Atlantic. The end of the Gatwick–JFK route on October 25, 2025 closes a chapter but aligns with the airline’s effort to streamline long-haul operations and maximise aircraft utilisation on the most lucrative city pairs.
The airline’s website no longer displays forward inventory for the affected services, confirming the schedule removal. As one industry account put it:
“Both routes have been removed from future schedules and are no longer available for booking on the airline’s website.”
That language mirrored the status for SAW and GNB when the winter timetable was updated; similar changes have now been applied to Nuremberg and to Gatwick–JFK as the season approaches.
Customers planning travel near the changeover should check booking confirmations for any automatic reissue or reroute and review the final flight date for each city pair: October 26, 2025 for Heathrow–SAW, Heathrow–GNB and Heathrow–NUE, and October 25, 2025 for Gatwick–JFK. While British Airways has not issued individual executive statements tied to these route cuts, the pattern reflects a global airline environment in which engine maintenance bottlenecks and delivery delays make every aircraft hour count. In that context, concentrating capacity where demand and revenue are strongest is the clearest way to protect the schedule into winter 2025–26.
Industry forums that monitor British Airways’ schedules summarised the winter update succinctly:
“BA will cut the following routes: LHR-SAW LHR-GNB LHR-NUE.”
Alongside that list, the consumer travel report on Gatwick–JFK confirmed the transatlantic withdrawal would extend beyond the usual winter pause:
“BA has announced it will scrap its popular route between London Gatwick and New York (JFK) later this year… from October 25 will cease to operate. BA usually pauses this route for the winter, between October and March, but has said next year it won’t return in the spring as usual.”
For travelers, the message is straightforward: check the timetable, note the final flight date, and plan London routes with Heathrow as the primary gateway for British Airways service to New York and Istanbul.
This Article in a Nutshell
British Airways will remove four London routes for winter 2025–26: Heathrow–SAW, Heathrow–GNB and Heathrow–NUE end October 26, 2025, and Gatwick–JFK ends October 25, 2025. The carrier cites aircraft shortages—partly from Trent 1000 engine problems on some 787s—and weaker demand on particular routes. BA will redeploy capacity to core markets, maintain nine daily Heathrow–JFK flights, and continue Istanbul service via IST. Passengers with affected bookings should expect rebooking options or refunds under standard policies.