Luton is the only major London airport where the train does not take you to the terminal. Get off at Luton Airport Parkway and you still have the DART — the Direct Air-Rail Transit — between you and check-in. Here is exactly how it works, and when it is worth skipping.
What the DART is
The DART is a short automated cable-pulled people-mover that runs from Luton Airport Parkway station to the terminal in around four minutes. It replaced the old shuttle bus in 2023. It runs frequently and is genuinely quick — but it is a separate leg, with a separate ticket, after your train.
The real journey, end to end
From central London the rail trip is: Thameslink or East Midlands service to Luton Airport Parkway, then the DART, then the walk into the terminal. Three legs, two tickets, and luggage to move at each change. For a single traveller in daylight that is fine. For a family at 4am, or anyone with cases, it is the part that goes wrong.
By road there is one leg: door to terminal forecourt. That is the core trade-off — see our fixed fares from London to Luton, Hertfordshire to Luton and Bedfordshire & Bucks to Luton.
When the DART is the right call
- You are travelling light, solo, in daylight, from a station already on the Thameslink line.
- You are not on a tight check-in window.
When a car wins
- Early flights. Luton is notorious for 4–6am departures before trains are frequent. A pre-booked car is allocated at booking, not on the day.
- Groups and luggage. One MPV or minibus carries the party and the cases in one go.
- Disruption. When Thameslink is down, the DART is irrelevant — see St Pancras to Luton when trains are cancelled.
- M1 traffic. Plan the buffer with our M1-to-Luton timing guide.
Towns close to Luton barely touch the rail network at all — see St Albans, Bedford and Milton Keynes to Luton.