A clear, kind guide to accessibility at Heathrow — how to arrange special assistance (it’s free, and a legal right), what’s provided, sunflower lanyards and sensory support, and the facilities that make the airport easier. Plus accessible, door-to-door RushXO transfers at either end.
Tell us your needs — driver assists at both ends
Heathrow is a vast airport, and moving through it can feel daunting if you, or someone you’re travelling with, has a disability, reduced mobility, or a non-visible condition. The reassuring news: in the UK, special assistance is free, it’s a legal right, and you don’t have to prove anything to use it. Arranged in advance, support is ready from the moment you arrive. This guide explains how to set it up, what help is available, and the lanyards, sensory packs and facilities that make the journey calmer.
How to book: request it through your airline when you book, or at least 48 hours before flying — they pass it to Heathrow’s team.
Cost: free, and a legal entitlement for disabled passengers and anyone with reduced mobility — no proof needed.
Help includes: wheelchair to the gate, security support, baggage, boarding, terminal transfers, and being met at the aircraft.
Extra: free sunflower lanyards, sensory packs, BSL interpreting, Changing Places — and accessible RushXO transfers at either end.
Booking ahead means help is waiting for you, with no time lost arranging it on the day.
Request assistance when you book, or at least 48 hours before flying — often via “Manage My Booking”. Describe your needs, whether you’ll bring your own mobility device, and any assistance animal. Mention return details too.
Your airline shares your details with Heathrow’s assistance team, who plan your support across the airport — departure, arrival or connection.
Complete Heathrow’s online accessibility questionnaire for a personalised travel guide covering each step of your journey, so you know exactly what to expect.
Make your way to an Assistance area or use a help point (in car parks, drop-off, forecourts and stations). The team meets you and takes care of the rest — including meeting you at the aircraft if connecting.
From kerb to cabin, the team can help with as much or as little as you need.
Wheelchair assistance through the airport to your gate. A self-serve wheelchair service is also available in all terminals if a companion can assist you.
Dedicated assistance and accessibility security lanes in Terminals 2, 3 and 5, with staff to help with belongings and screening — tell them about any medical devices.
Help with luggage, getting to the aircraft, boarding and getting seated — including ambulift or air-bridge support where needed.
Accessible transport between terminals, including an Assistance bus from the forecourts — useful for connections and longer walks.
If you’re arriving or connecting with assistance booked, a team member meets you at the aircraft and escorts you onward.
Booked assistance can include help to visit shops or restaurants while you wait (subject to availability), plus accessible seating with induction loops.
Two things to look for at Heathrow:
If you can’t find a help point, Heathrow lists direct phone numbers for the assistance team on its official accessibility pages — worth saving before you travel. Exact assistance-area locations vary by terminal and level, so check the current details on Heathrow’s site.
You’re always welcome to use your own wheelchair or mobility aid through the airport. Whether it can travel in the cabin or must go in the hold depends on the aircraft, so your airline will need to know the device’s make and model, dimensions and weight, and the battery type (dry or wet cell). They’ll also advise how to prepare it for loading. Walking sticks are screened at security, and if you rely on one for support, staff can provide an alternative while yours is checked. Let a security manager know about any medical device — a pacemaker, stoma bag or insulin pump — when you arrive.
Heathrow’s free assistance takes over once you reach the terminal — but the journey to and from the airport matters just as much. RushXO can arrange step-free and wheelchair-accessible vehicles in advance (subject to availability), with a driver who helps at both ends, on a fixed fare with no surge.
It’s the same calm, fixed-fare service as our main Heathrow transfers — just arranged around your access needs. Travelling with an assistance dog? See our pet & assistance-dog guide for the airport process.
Plan the rest of your trip — transfers, parking, getting into London and more.