
Virgin Atlantic has confirmed that it will reduce flights from
London Heathrow Airport (LHR) to Bengaluru, Boston, Miami, Las Vegas, and San Francisco. The change, while only temporary, will see roughly half as many services as previously planned.
Virgin is the second-largest long-haul operator from the UK by flights. From August through December, Cirium Diio data shows that the
SkyTeam member plans an average of 34 daily departures from Edinburgh, LHR, and Manchester. LHR accounts for 89% of them.
These Five Routes Now Have Fewer Flights
The changes, which only apply to September and October, are summarized in the following table. Four of the markets are in the US.
Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) is included in the cuts. However, Virgin’s joint-venture partner
Delta Air Lines, which operates on a metal-neutral basis with Virgin, will continue to serve the route daily on the Airbus A330-900. Virgin’s daily offering will be the lowest frequency to Massachusetts in September/October since 2023.
The only non-US destination is the increasingly popular Kempegowda International Airport (BLR) serving Bengaluru. Virgin has flown there since 2024. Temporarily returning to a daily offering will be back at level available throughout 2024 and 2025. This market is also important to feed Virgin’s US services, including to
San Francisco International Airport (SFO).
Virgin From LHR To… | What Was Planned For September/October?* | What Is Now Scheduled For September/October?** |
|---|---|---|
BLR | 13 weekly | Daily 787-9 |
BOS | Up to two daily A330-900, 787-9 | Daily A350-1000 |
Las Vegas’ | 10 weekly 787-9 | Daily 787-9 |
| Two daily A330-300, A330-900, 787-9 | Daily A350-1000 |
SFO | 10 weekly A350-1000, 787-9 | Daily A350-1000 |
* Until the latest schedule update | ** Known as of July 14 |
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Virgin Has Removed Up To 14% Of LHR-US Flights
While it varies somewhat depending on the specific week in September/October, Virgin had primarily scheduled 22 daily departures from LHR to the US. When all airlines are included, the carrier was to operate approximately 18% of the services, less than half that of oneworld’s
British Airways.
Given Virgin’s cuts, the airline’s offering has mainly been reduced to 19 daily takeoffs, which is a drop of 14%. However, it does vary at times.
American Airlines will temporarily overtake Virgin as the second-largest LHR-US operator. It’ll usually have 21 daily departures from the UK’s busiest airport. Virgin will become the joint-third-largest carrier in the transatlantic market, tied with
United Airlines (19 daily outbound services).
Virgin will have 11 US routes in September/October: New York JFK (six daily A330-900, A350-1000, 787-9), Los Angeles (three daily A350-1000, 787-9), Orlando (two daily A330-300, A330-900, A350-1000), Atlanta (daily A350-1000), BOS (daily A350-1000), LAS (daily 787-9), MIA (daily A350-1000), Seattle (daily A330-900), SFO (daily A350-1000), Tampa (daily A330-900), and Washington Dulles (daily A330-300, A330-900). BA will begin LHR-Tampa flights later this year.
India Flights Have Fallen By As Much As 17%
While it might not seem like it right now, the US and India have become increasingly critical nations in Virgin’s network. Until the latest schedule update, Virgin had primarily planned six daily services from LHR to the South Asian country in September/October. It was set to fly 13 times a week to BLR and double daily to
Delhi Indira Gandhi International Airport (DEL) and
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport (BOM).
The latest information shows that five daily services will be available in the two affected months. Influenced by the fairly small numbers, that’s a drop of 17%. Virgin will now run daily to BLR (787-9) and twice-daily to DEL (787-9; the A350-1000 has been removed) and BOM (787-9). It will now have 22% of the overall LHR-India market, down from a quarter.


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