Being diverted to a far UK airport — Birmingham, Manchester or East Midlands — when you were bound for London is a bigger journey home than a local diversion. The key point: this is the airline’s responsibility, and for long distances they should provide transport or cover reasonable costs, so speak to them first. Because these trips are long (and a taxi is costly), it’s worth comparing the train (if running) with a car. This guide helps you choose — and a fixed-price car is there if the trains have stopped or you’re a group.
Key takeaways
- Long trips: Birmingham and East Midlands are ~110–120 miles from London; Manchester ~200 miles.
- Airline first: for a far diversion they should provide transport or cover reasonable costs — keep receipts.
- Train vs taxi: if the train is running it’s usually cheaper for one or two people; a car wins for groups or once trains stop.
- Fixed-price car: available door-to-door, 24/7 — get a quote, as long-distance fares are higher.
- Claim it back: reasonable onward travel is usually reimbursable after a diversion.
01 / FIRSTSpeak to the airline — it’s a long way
For a diversion this far from your destination, the airline should be actively helping: a coach to your original airport, a hotel if it’s overnight, or reimbursement of reasonable travel. Because the distances are large, the cost of getting back matters, so it’s worth pressing for the airline’s transport before self-funding — and keeping every receipt if you do pay yourself.
02 / DISTANCEHow far is it back to London?
| Diverted to | Approx distance to London | Approx drive |
|---|---|---|
| East Midlands | ~110 miles | ~2–2½ hours |
| Birmingham | ~120 miles | ~2–2½ hours |
| Manchester | ~200 miles | ~3½–4½ hours |
These are serious distances, so the choice between train and car matters more than for a local diversion.
03 / TRAIN OR TAXIWhich makes sense?
Train (if running)
Pros: Fast on these routes (Birmingham and Manchester both have frequent, quick services to London) and usually cheaper for one or two people.
Cons: Not door-to-door; may have stopped for the night after a late diversion; changes with luggage and tired travellers.
Fixed-price taxi
Pros: Door-to-door; runs 24/7 when trains have stopped; one fixed fare for a whole group; no changes with luggage or children.
Cons: A long-distance fare is high — worth pushing the airline to cover, or splitting across a group. Get a quote first.
04 / BESTThe sensible choice
Honestly: if the train is running and you’re travelling light, it’s usually the cheaper way back from Birmingham, East Midlands or Manchester. A fixed-price car makes most sense when the trains have stopped for the night, when you’re a family or group (splitting one fare), or when you simply need a door-to-door ride after a long, disrupted day — and it’s reimbursable if the airline is at fault. We’ll quote a fixed price so you can compare properly.
05 / WHYA fixed price for a long trip
On a long run, the last thing you want is a meter climbing for hours. A pre-booked TfL-licensed fixed-price car gives one agreed fare for the whole journey, whatever the traffic, with a professional driver and a vehicle sized for your party and luggage. As a Transport for London-licensed private hire operator running 24/7, Rushxo confirms the price and driver in advance — and you keep the receipt for your airline claim.
06 / TIPSDo these now
- Press the airline for transport or a written commitment to reimburse — it’s a long way.
- Check live train times before deciding — if they’ve stopped, a car may be the only option.
- Get a fixed quote so you can compare car vs train honestly.
- Travelling as a group? One minibus split between you can beat several train tickets.
- Keep all receipts for your claim.
FAQFrequently asked questions
My flight was diverted to Birmingham — how do I get to London?
Ask the airline first, as they should provide transport or cover costs for a diversion this far. Birmingham is about 120 miles (roughly 2–2.5 hours). If trains are running they’re usually cheapest for one or two people; a fixed-price car is door-to-door and best for groups or once trains stop.
Diverted to Manchester — is a taxi to London realistic?
It’s about 200 miles (3.5–4.5 hours), so a taxi is a long, costly trip — best pushed onto the airline, split across a group, or used when trains have stopped. If the train is running it’s usually the cheaper way back. Get a fixed quote to compare.
Ryanair diverted me to East Midlands — how do I get back?
East Midlands is about 110 miles from London. Ask Ryanair about a coach or reimbursement first. Then compare the train (if running) with a fixed-price car, which is best door-to-door, for groups, or once trains have stopped. Keep receipts to claim.
Who pays for the trip back after a far diversion?
Generally the airline, which is responsible for onward transport or reasonable costs. For long distances it’s especially worth getting their transport or a commitment to reimburse before self-funding — and keeping all receipts.
Is the train or a taxi better from a far airport?
If the train is running and you’re travelling light, it’s usually cheaper. A fixed-price car wins for groups (one shared fare), with lots of luggage, or when trains have stopped for the night.
Can I get a fixed price for a long-distance airport run?
Yes. We quote one agreed fare for the whole journey, so a meter can’t climb over hours, with a vehicle sized for your party. Get a quote to compare with the train.
Will the airline reimburse a long taxi fare?
Reasonable onward travel is usually reimbursable, but for a very long trip the airline may expect you to use their transport or the train. Ask first, get it in writing where possible, and keep receipts.
We’re a group diverted far from London — what’s best?
A group changes the maths: one minibus split between you can beat several train fares and keeps everyone together door-to-door. Get a fixed quote and compare.
Time Matters
Diverted far from home? Get a fixed-price quote
Fixed fares confirmed before you ride. Local licensed drivers, flight tracking, 24/7 human support — and no surge, ever.