An early flight from Stansted throws up one big problem: public transport usually hasn’t started when you need to leave. The first Stansted Express from Liverpool Street is typically around 05:10, with a gap earlier in the night when no train runs. So if your flight is at 5, 6 or 7am — meaning you need to be there around 3.30–5am — the train may simply not be running yet. Your realistic options are a night coach or bus, a rideshare (if cars are available), or a pre-booked fixed-price taxi that runs 24/7 and turns up on time. Stansted is about 37 miles from central London, roughly 60–90 minutes by road.
Key takeaways
- Check first-service times — the first Stansted Express is typically ~05:10, with an overnight gap — check live times.
- Work back from your flight: aim to be at the airport ~2 hours before (3 for long-haul), so a 6am flight means leaving very early.
- Night coach/bus: cheapest, runs overnight, but slow and not door-to-door.
- Rideshare: possible, but few cars at 4am and prices surge — no guarantee one turns up.
- Fixed-price taxi: a pre-booked, TfL-licensed car is guaranteed to arrive, 24/7, with the fare fixed and no surge — the safe choice for an early start.
01 / TIMESWhen does transport to Stansted actually start?
The first Stansted Express from Liverpool Street is typically around 05:10, with a gap earlier in the night when no train runs. National Express runs coaches through the night from Liverpool Street, Victoria and Stratford, but they are slow and not door-to-door. The key point: for a very early flight there is often a window in the small hours when no train runs at all, so you can’t rely on rail alone. Always check live times the night before, and have a guaranteed backup.
02 / OPTIONSYour early-morning options — honest pros and cons
A straight look at each way to reach Stansted in the small hours:
1. Train / rail
Pros: Fast and good value once it’s running; predictable; frequent later in the morning.
Cons: Often not running yet for the earliest flights; not door-to-door, so you still need to get to the station with your bags; a missed early train can mean a missed flight.
2. Night coach or bus
Pros: Cheapest option; runs through the night; no need to change if your stop is on the route.
Cons: Slow; fixed stops mean you still have to reach the pickup and your final door; limited luggage room; tight if the timetable slips.
3. Rideshare app
Pros: Door-to-door; easy to request from your phone if a car is nearby.
Cons: At 3–5am there are few drivers online, so you may wait or get no car at all; prices surge; the fare isn’t fixed; late cancellations are common — a real risk when you have a flight to catch.
4. Pre-booked fixed-price taxi (Rushxo)
Pros: Guaranteed to turn up at the time you book; true door-to-door; the price is fixed in advance — no surge, no night premium; a TfL-licensed, DBS-checked driver is assigned to you; 24/7; vehicles sized for luggage and groups; the driver plans the run so you arrive with time to spare.
Cons: Costs more than the coach or a shared train per person — so for a solo traveller on a budget once trains are running, rail can be the cheaper spend.
03 / COMPAREStansted at 4am — options at a glance
| Option | Runs at 4am? | Door-to-door? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stansted Express | No (~05:10 first; overnight gap) | No | Solo, once running |
| National Express coach | Yes | No | Budget, time to spare |
| Rideshare | Sometimes (few cars, surge) | Yes | Light bags, cars available |
| Fixed-price taxi | Yes (24/7, guaranteed) | Yes | Early starts, luggage, groups, certainty |
04 / TIMINGHow early should you leave for Stansted?
Work backwards from your flight. A sensible rule: be at the airport about 2 hours before a short-haul departure and 3 hours before long-haul, then add the drive. With Stansted about 60–90 minutes away by road (often quicker in the small hours when the roads are clear), a 6am short-haul flight usually means leaving central London around 3.30–4am. Build in a buffer for check-in and security, and remember bag drop can close 40–60 minutes before departure. A pre-booked driver plans the pickup around all of this. Stansted has a single terminal, so drop-off is straightforward once you arrive.
05 / WHYWhy a pre-booked fixed-price taxi is the safe early-morning choice
At 4am the thing you need most is certainty — a car that actually arrives, at a price you already know. A pre-booked fixed-price taxi delivers exactly that: the fare is agreed in advance with no surge and no night premium, a named TfL-licensed, enhanced-DBS-checked driver is assigned to you, and because dispatch runs 24/7, a 4am job is treated the same as a midday one. As a Transport for London-licensed private hire operator, Rushxo confirms the booking, sends you the driver and vehicle details in advance, and the driver tracks the plan so you reach Stansted in good time. When a missed car means a missed flight, that reliability is the whole point.
06 / COSTCosts & times to Stansted
Stansted is about 37 miles from central London, roughly 60–90 minutes by road. Indicative fixed private-hire fares start from around £88 for a saloon into or out of central London, more for larger vehicles or destinations further out. Every fare is agreed before you travel with tolls and waiting included and no surge, and unsocial hours cost the same fixed price as the middle of the day. For your exact address, get a quick fixed quote before you book.
07 / TIPSFive tips for a smooth early-morning airport run
- Pre-book the night before — don’t gamble on hailing a car at 4am.
- Give your flight number and terminal so the driver plans the pickup and drops you at the right door.
- Ask for a confirmation and the driver’s details the evening before, so you can relax.
- Allow a buffer — aim to be at the airport 2 hours before short-haul, 3 for long-haul.
- Choose the right vehicle — one minibus beats two cars for a group with luggage.
FAQFrequently asked questions
How do I get to Stansted for an early morning flight?
For a 3–6am departure the trains often haven’t started, so your options are a night coach or bus, a rideshare if cars are available, or a pre-booked fixed-price taxi that runs 24/7 and is guaranteed to turn up — the safest choice for an early start with luggage or a flight to catch.
Is there a taxi to Stansted at 4am?
Yes. A pre-booked, TfL-licensed fixed-price car runs 24/7, so a 4am pickup is no problem and costs the same fixed fare as a daytime one, with a named driver assigned to you in advance.
What time does the first train to Stansted run?
The first Stansted Express from Liverpool Street is typically around 05:10, with a gap earlier in the night when no train runs. Always check live times the night before, as they change — and if your flight is very early, have a guaranteed backup like a pre-booked taxi.
How early should I leave for an early morning flight?
Aim to be at the airport about 2 hours before short-haul and 3 hours before long-haul, then add the drive. With Stansted about 60–90 minutes away, a 6am flight usually means leaving very early — a pre-booked driver plans the pickup around your flight.
Is Uber reliable for an early morning airport run?
It can be hit-and-miss at 3–5am, when few drivers are online and prices surge or cars cancel. A pre-booked fixed-price taxi is more reliable because the car and price are confirmed in advance.
What’s the cheapest way to Stansted early morning?
A night coach or bus is usually cheapest but slow and not door-to-door. Once trains start, rail is good value. For guaranteed door-to-door at any hour, a fixed-price taxi is the most reliable, with the fare set in advance.
Can I pre-book a fixed-price taxi to Stansted?
Yes. Book online or by WhatsApp the night before, with the fare fixed in advance, a TfL-licensed driver assigned, and 24/7 human support if anything changes.
Will the taxi turn up on time at that hour?
Yes — that’s the point of pre-booking. A named driver is assigned to your job, you get their details in advance, and the driver plans the run so you reach Stansted with time to spare.
Time Matters
Pre-book your early-morning Stansted taxi
Fixed fares confirmed before you ride. Local licensed drivers, flight tracking, 24/7 human support — and no surge, ever.