Heathrow Airport is open today with low delays, but many passengers face trouble getting to and from the terminals after a fire equipment failure stopped part of the Elizabeth Line in early August. The halt follows a recent UK air traffic control fault that also slowed flights nationwide.
Transport for London suspended Elizabeth Line services serving Terminals 2, 3, and 4 after a faulty fire system triggered at a station between Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3. Emergency teams secured the area. Trains remain limited on some stretches, pushing travelers onto the Heathrow Express, buses, and taxis.

What happened and why it matters
- The issue: fire equipment failure near Terminals 2 & 3.
- When/where: early August 2025, affecting Heathrow access.
- The result: Elizabeth Line disruption, longer trips, crowded transport, and missed connections for some passengers.
- Wider context: a July 30 air traffic control (ATC) glitch at Swanwick briefly reduced Heathrow flight movements and caused knock-on delays.
NATS, which manages UK airspace, apologized for the ATC failure and said the system recovered within 20 minutes after switching to backups. British Airways capped movements at 32 flights per hour during the incident before returning to normal after 7:15 pm. Authorities said it was not a cyberattack. Still, the combined hit from the ATC fault and the Elizabeth Line stoppage has stretched airline schedules, staff rosters, and passenger patience.
“Technical faults can snowball into national travel headaches.”
The incident has raised calls for leadership and systemic changes across aviation and transport bodies.
Reactions and political pressure
- Ryanair: COO Neal McMahon called for NATS CEO Martin Rolfe to resign, saying repeated failures show the need for change.
- Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander: warned passengers may see continued disruption and pressed for urgent reforms to NATS.
- NATS: apologized, stressed backups restored service quickly, and denied a cyberattack.
- British Airways: temporarily capped movements, prioritised safety, then resumed normal schedules.
These tensions underline how technical faults across transport networks can quickly escalate into widespread travel disruption.
Passenger impact on the ground
- With the Elizabeth Line affected, many visitors and returning residents must switch routes. The Heathrow Express runs to Paddington and serves Terminals 2, 3, and 5. For Terminal 4, passengers may need to transfer via shuttle buses or use taxis.
- After the July ATC issue, airlines canceled and delayed flights. Heathrow listed cancellations to Brussels, Toronto, New York, and Berlin as the network caught up from earlier faults.
- Families, students, and work travelers report missed meetings and missed study intakes when trains and flights both slip. One family arriving from Toronto described leaving an extra hour “just for the train,” then still needing a taxi after the Elizabeth Line stopped short of Terminal 4.
What to do if you’re flying today
- Check your flight before you leave. Use your airline’s app and Heathrow’s live page. If delays stack up, get on standby for earlier transport to the airport.
- Plan backup routes to the terminals. If the Elizabeth Line isn’t running to Terminals 2, 3, or 4:
- Take the Heathrow Express from Paddington.
- Use local buses or licensed taxis.
- Add at least 30–60 minutes for queues and transfers.
- If your flight is canceled or delayed, contact your airline for rebooking. Ask about rights to food, hotel, and refunds under UK/EU rules. For official guidance, see the UK Civil Aviation Authority passenger rights page.
- Keep watching official updates:
- Heathrow Airport: website and @HeathrowAirport
- Transport for London: website and @TfL
- NATS: service updates at nats.aero
Analysis from the industry
According to VisaVerge.com, airport access problems often hit short-haul and evening flights hardest because tight turnarounds and curfews leave little buffer. That pattern is recurring as airlines try to recover aircraft positions after the ATC event and then adjust crew duty limits when Elizabeth Line disruption slows staff and passengers.
Operational and policy stakes
- When NATS restricts movements, even briefly, it can push later flights out of rotation, creating rolling delays. Crew reach duty-hour limits and aircraft miss planned maintenance windows.
- Fire safety systems on rail lines will trigger shutdowns until checks are complete. This keeps people safe but clogs roads and pushes more travelers into taxis and buses, slowing airport drop-offs and pick-ups.
- Airlines want better backup systems and quicker communication. Passenger groups want clearer alerts, easier refunds, and automatic rebooking.
Background and recurring issues
Heathrow is Europe’s busiest hub, serving over 80 million passengers a year through four terminals and two runways. Recent infrastructure problems include:
- 2023: ATC breakdown affecting hundreds of thousands.
- 2025: power substation fire that stranded thousands.
Taken together, these events raise questions about backup power, digital redundancy, and cross-agency coordination between Heathrow Airport, NATS, and Transport for London.
For immigrants and international travelers
- Visa holders arriving for work, study, or family visits often plan tight connections. Elizabeth Line delays can cause missed onward journeys, disrupting visa reporting dates, university check-ins, or job start dates.
- If you must report to a university or employer by a certain date, keep proof of the Heathrow transport disruption (screenshots, emails, TfL alerts). Many institutions accept this as a valid reason for late arrival.
- If your visa requires collecting a BRP or attending a biometric appointment, contact the issuing office to explain the delay and request a new time. Keep all delay evidence.
Practical tips to reduce stress
- Book flights that land earlier in the day to allow more time to reach central London if the Elizabeth Line is interrupted.
- If you rely on the Elizabeth Line, set alerts in the TfL app for Heathrow branch status. Have backup options: Heathrow Express, bus routes, and taxi prices from your starting point.
- Pack a small emergency kit in carry-on: snacks, water, phone battery, and medicine, in case you face long queues after landing.
What comes next
- TfL engineers are expected to complete safety checks and restore full Elizabeth Line services. Heathrow and TfL plan to speed up upgrades to fire systems and backups at key stations.
- Government reviews of NATS management and technology are progressing, with possible leadership changes and new rules by late 2025. Airlines will press for stricter performance standards and quicker incident reporting.
Bottom line for today
- Heathrow operations are stable with low delays.
- The Elizabeth Line issue still causes access problems for Terminals 2, 3, and 4.
- Leave extra time, confirm your flight and route, and keep documents to prove delay if you need to explain a late arrival to a school, employer, or immigration authority.
This Article in a Nutshell