Door to door
A transfer skips every change and queue.
Southampton Cruise Port → Gatwick · Travel guide 2026
Off the ship with a fortnight of luggage and a Gatwick flight ahead. The port and the airport are about 95 miles apart, and the obvious-looking coach is actually the slow option here. This guide lays out every realistic way — with current times, costs and luggage rules — plus how much time to allow before your flight.
A transfer skips every change and queue.
Driver waiting at the terminal with your name.
Dock late or flight delayed? The pickup adjusts.
Agreed before you sail. No meter, no surge.
If you have a flight to catch, a pre-booked private transfer is the simplest option: door to door from the cruise terminal to your Gatwick terminal in about 1h 55m, luggage handled, driver waiting as you disembark. Fixed fares from about £130 for a saloon — see fixed prices.
The twist for Gatwick: the train is the better public-transport option, around 1h 49m with one change (via Clapham Junction). The National Express coach is cheapest from about £24, but slow at roughly 2.5–3 hours because it often routes via Heathrow.
Three ways to travel
Ranked by how well each suits cruise passengers with luggage and a flight to make.
Met inside the terminal, bags carried, door to door, flight tracked. Built for turnaround day.
View fixed prices → 02 · FASTEST PUBLICQuicker than the coach for Gatwick, but you carry the bags and start with a taxi to the station.
Read the detail → 03 · CHEAPESTLowest fare, but slow — it often loops via Heathrow — and starts from the city-centre coach station.
Read the detail →How far is it?
The port to Gatwick is roughly 75–95 miles depending on the route, mostly along the M27, A27 and M23. By car it is about 1 hour 30 minutes to 1 hour 55 minutes, longer in traffic. Unlike Heathrow, Gatwick has a reasonable rail link, but still no direct train — and the coach is unusually slow on this route. The simplest, lowest-stress version is a private Southampton Cruise Port to Gatwick transfer, which we cover first.
Option 1
A pre-booked private transfer is built for exactly this situation. Your driver meets you inside the cruise terminal with a name board, takes the bags, and drives you straight to your Gatwick terminal — one vehicle, no changes, no queues.
The advantages that matter on turnaround day: the price is agreed before you sail, a vehicle is reserved so you are not competing for the dwindling taxi rank, and a good operator tracks your flight and adjusts the pickup if your ship docks late. It costs more than the train or coach, and that is the honest trade-off — you are paying for certainty and for not changing trains with cruise cases.
Option 2
There is no direct train, but Gatwick is better connected by rail than Heathrow. A South Western Railway service from Southampton Central reaches Gatwick in about 1 hour 49 minutes with a single change (typically at Clapham Junction). That makes the train quicker than the coach on this route, which is unusual.
The catch is the same as always for a cruise: you first need a taxi from the cruise terminal to Southampton Central (about 10 minutes), then you manage your own luggage through the change. It is faster and cheaper than the coach, but a long way from the kerb-to-kerb ease of a transfer.
Option 3
National Express runs a direct coach from Southampton to Gatwick from around £24.40 one-way, but the fastest journeys take roughly 2.5 to 3 hours — noticeably slower than the train — because the route often loops via Heathrow before reaching Gatwick's North Terminal. Services are less frequent than the Heathrow coach, with the last departure in the late afternoon.
As with every public option, the coach leaves from Southampton Coach Station in the city centre, not the cruise terminal, so you start with a taxi from the port (about 10 minutes). The "Change & Go" add-on (around £5) lets you take an earlier or later coach if disembarkation runs off-schedule — useful given the limited timetable.
At a glance
| Option | Approx. time | Approx. cost | Changes | Luggage | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Private transfer | ~1h 55m | From ~£130 (car) | None, door to door | No practical limit | Flights, families, heavy bags |
| Train | ~1h 49m | ~£25–£55 | 1 change (Clapham Jn) | Carry it all yourself | Faster public option, light bags |
| National Express coach | ~2.5–3h | ~£24+ | Taxi to coach station; via Heathrow | 1 large + 1 hand | Cheapest, plenty of time |
Prices and times are indicative and change — confirm current fares with National Rail and National Express, and get a live quote for a private transfer, before you travel.
Don't miss your flight
Where cruise passengers most often come unstuck. The short version: you cannot leave the moment the ship arrives.
A cruise ship may dock in Southampton early — often around 5am to 6am — but you will not be allowed off straight away. Disembarkation is staggered and generally runs between about 08:00 and 11:00, with passengers called by group or luggage-tag colour. Allow at least an hour from docking before you are actually off the ship, and often more.
The earliest way off is self-disembarkation: if you can manage your own luggage (with wheels), you carry your bags off yourself and can usually leave as soon as disembarkation opens, often around 7:30–8am. Customs is normally a simple walk-through. The bigger variable is transport: on a busy turnaround day several thousand passengers leave within the same window, the taxi rank empties fast, and people have genuinely missed trains and flights waiting in line for a cab.
Rule of thumb: leave around 7 hours between your scheduled port arrival and your flight departure. For a Gatwick flight that means:
If your flight is unavoidably early, the safest combination is self-disembarkation plus a pre-booked private transfer timed to your ship's arrival, so you are first off and straight into a waiting vehicle.
Good to know
No direct train, but a South Western Railway service via Clapham Junction reaches Gatwick in about 1 hour 49 minutes with one change — which makes the train faster than the coach for this route.
For Gatwick the train is usually quicker, at about 1 hour 49 minutes with one change, because the National Express coach can take around 2.5 to 3 hours, often routing via Heathrow.
A pre-booked private transfer: door to door in about 1 hour 55 minutes, with luggage handled and no changes. See fixed transfer prices.
Disembarkation usually runs between about 08:00 and 11:00. If you self-disembark with your own luggage you can often leave around 7:30–8am, at the front of the queue.
Aim for around 7 hours between scheduled port arrival and departure, and try not to book a Gatwick flight before about noon.
With a pre-booked private transfer, yes — the driver waits inside the terminal with a name board and helps with the luggage. See the Southampton Cruise Port to Gatwick transfer page for fixed prices.
Ready when you dock
Get a fixed price for a door-to-door Southampton Cruise Port to Gatwick transfer, timed to your disembarkation.
See fixed Gatwick prices →