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Travel Help · Diverted Flights

Diverted to Birmingham or Manchester? Getting back to London

Flight diverted to Birmingham, Manchester or East Midlands instead of London? These are long trips, so here’s how to get back sensibly — who should pay, when the train beats a taxi, and a fixed-price car for when you need one.

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 toApprox distance to LondonApprox 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

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.