Do I have to go through customs, immigration during my Heathrow layover? I'm switching airlines.



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Do I have to go through customs, immigration during my Heathrow layover? I'm switching airlines. I arrive on American from the USA (US Citizen) and depart for Lisbon on TAP. I will have no checked luggage, just carryon. I'm planning on a 3 hour layover. What are the details and is 3 hours enough time??










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  • 2





    Is this all on one ticket, or two tickets?

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:47











  • @Gagravarr without checked luggage, why would it matter?

    – phoog
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:54






  • 3





    @phoog It matters for the second half of their question "is 3 hours enough", not for the first half

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 17:04

















1















Do I have to go through customs, immigration during my Heathrow layover? I'm switching airlines. I arrive on American from the USA (US Citizen) and depart for Lisbon on TAP. I will have no checked luggage, just carryon. I'm planning on a 3 hour layover. What are the details and is 3 hours enough time??










share|improve this question

















  • 2





    Is this all on one ticket, or two tickets?

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:47











  • @Gagravarr without checked luggage, why would it matter?

    – phoog
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:54






  • 3





    @phoog It matters for the second half of their question "is 3 hours enough", not for the first half

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 17:04













1












1








1








Do I have to go through customs, immigration during my Heathrow layover? I'm switching airlines. I arrive on American from the USA (US Citizen) and depart for Lisbon on TAP. I will have no checked luggage, just carryon. I'm planning on a 3 hour layover. What are the details and is 3 hours enough time??










share|improve this question














Do I have to go through customs, immigration during my Heathrow layover? I'm switching airlines. I arrive on American from the USA (US Citizen) and depart for Lisbon on TAP. I will have no checked luggage, just carryon. I'm planning on a 3 hour layover. What are the details and is 3 hours enough time??







transit






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asked Mar 3 '16 at 16:26









Fred WardenFred Warden

61




61







  • 2





    Is this all on one ticket, or two tickets?

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:47











  • @Gagravarr without checked luggage, why would it matter?

    – phoog
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:54






  • 3





    @phoog It matters for the second half of their question "is 3 hours enough", not for the first half

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 17:04












  • 2





    Is this all on one ticket, or two tickets?

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:47











  • @Gagravarr without checked luggage, why would it matter?

    – phoog
    Mar 3 '16 at 16:54






  • 3





    @phoog It matters for the second half of their question "is 3 hours enough", not for the first half

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 17:04







2




2





Is this all on one ticket, or two tickets?

– Gagravarr
Mar 3 '16 at 16:47





Is this all on one ticket, or two tickets?

– Gagravarr
Mar 3 '16 at 16:47













@Gagravarr without checked luggage, why would it matter?

– phoog
Mar 3 '16 at 16:54





@Gagravarr without checked luggage, why would it matter?

– phoog
Mar 3 '16 at 16:54




3




3





@phoog It matters for the second half of their question "is 3 hours enough", not for the first half

– Gagravarr
Mar 3 '16 at 17:04





@phoog It matters for the second half of their question "is 3 hours enough", not for the first half

– Gagravarr
Mar 3 '16 at 17:04










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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3














Heathrow has airside shuttles connecting all of the terminals, so you should be able to transfer between international flights on any airlines without passing immigration (though you will pass an airside-to-airside security checkpoint). Follow the "Connecting Flights" signs and pick up your boarding pass at the appropriate transfer desk if you didn't already get one when checking in for the first leg.



Three hours ought to be plenty if your inbound flight arrives on time. If it doesn't, well, then it depends on how late it is. You'll really want to be on a single tickets such that the airlines will be obliged to rebook you in that case. Or at least, I don't think any possible savings from traveling on different tickets over a single one would be worth the risk to me.



(When traveling on different tickets, another question would be whether the first carrier will let you board the inbound leg without being sure you have the right documentation to enter the UK in case of a missed or canceled connection -- but with a US passport that shouldn't be a problem for you in any case).






share|improve this answer

























  • You should probably point out that while the airside transfers avoid the need for Customs and Immigration, you will still need to pass through a Security checkpoint at the departure terminal

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 21:50






  • 1





    Heathrow also have a pretty good flight connections guide on their website, which has maps, terminal information etc

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 4 '16 at 14:09











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














Heathrow has airside shuttles connecting all of the terminals, so you should be able to transfer between international flights on any airlines without passing immigration (though you will pass an airside-to-airside security checkpoint). Follow the "Connecting Flights" signs and pick up your boarding pass at the appropriate transfer desk if you didn't already get one when checking in for the first leg.



Three hours ought to be plenty if your inbound flight arrives on time. If it doesn't, well, then it depends on how late it is. You'll really want to be on a single tickets such that the airlines will be obliged to rebook you in that case. Or at least, I don't think any possible savings from traveling on different tickets over a single one would be worth the risk to me.



(When traveling on different tickets, another question would be whether the first carrier will let you board the inbound leg without being sure you have the right documentation to enter the UK in case of a missed or canceled connection -- but with a US passport that shouldn't be a problem for you in any case).






share|improve this answer

























  • You should probably point out that while the airside transfers avoid the need for Customs and Immigration, you will still need to pass through a Security checkpoint at the departure terminal

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 21:50






  • 1





    Heathrow also have a pretty good flight connections guide on their website, which has maps, terminal information etc

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 4 '16 at 14:09















3














Heathrow has airside shuttles connecting all of the terminals, so you should be able to transfer between international flights on any airlines without passing immigration (though you will pass an airside-to-airside security checkpoint). Follow the "Connecting Flights" signs and pick up your boarding pass at the appropriate transfer desk if you didn't already get one when checking in for the first leg.



Three hours ought to be plenty if your inbound flight arrives on time. If it doesn't, well, then it depends on how late it is. You'll really want to be on a single tickets such that the airlines will be obliged to rebook you in that case. Or at least, I don't think any possible savings from traveling on different tickets over a single one would be worth the risk to me.



(When traveling on different tickets, another question would be whether the first carrier will let you board the inbound leg without being sure you have the right documentation to enter the UK in case of a missed or canceled connection -- but with a US passport that shouldn't be a problem for you in any case).






share|improve this answer

























  • You should probably point out that while the airside transfers avoid the need for Customs and Immigration, you will still need to pass through a Security checkpoint at the departure terminal

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 21:50






  • 1





    Heathrow also have a pretty good flight connections guide on their website, which has maps, terminal information etc

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 4 '16 at 14:09













3












3








3







Heathrow has airside shuttles connecting all of the terminals, so you should be able to transfer between international flights on any airlines without passing immigration (though you will pass an airside-to-airside security checkpoint). Follow the "Connecting Flights" signs and pick up your boarding pass at the appropriate transfer desk if you didn't already get one when checking in for the first leg.



Three hours ought to be plenty if your inbound flight arrives on time. If it doesn't, well, then it depends on how late it is. You'll really want to be on a single tickets such that the airlines will be obliged to rebook you in that case. Or at least, I don't think any possible savings from traveling on different tickets over a single one would be worth the risk to me.



(When traveling on different tickets, another question would be whether the first carrier will let you board the inbound leg without being sure you have the right documentation to enter the UK in case of a missed or canceled connection -- but with a US passport that shouldn't be a problem for you in any case).






share|improve this answer















Heathrow has airside shuttles connecting all of the terminals, so you should be able to transfer between international flights on any airlines without passing immigration (though you will pass an airside-to-airside security checkpoint). Follow the "Connecting Flights" signs and pick up your boarding pass at the appropriate transfer desk if you didn't already get one when checking in for the first leg.



Three hours ought to be plenty if your inbound flight arrives on time. If it doesn't, well, then it depends on how late it is. You'll really want to be on a single tickets such that the airlines will be obliged to rebook you in that case. Or at least, I don't think any possible savings from traveling on different tickets over a single one would be worth the risk to me.



(When traveling on different tickets, another question would be whether the first carrier will let you board the inbound leg without being sure you have the right documentation to enter the UK in case of a missed or canceled connection -- but with a US passport that shouldn't be a problem for you in any case).







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 4 '16 at 13:40

























answered Mar 3 '16 at 19:45









Henning MakholmHenning Makholm

44.3k8106165




44.3k8106165












  • You should probably point out that while the airside transfers avoid the need for Customs and Immigration, you will still need to pass through a Security checkpoint at the departure terminal

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 21:50






  • 1





    Heathrow also have a pretty good flight connections guide on their website, which has maps, terminal information etc

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 4 '16 at 14:09

















  • You should probably point out that while the airside transfers avoid the need for Customs and Immigration, you will still need to pass through a Security checkpoint at the departure terminal

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 3 '16 at 21:50






  • 1





    Heathrow also have a pretty good flight connections guide on their website, which has maps, terminal information etc

    – Gagravarr
    Mar 4 '16 at 14:09
















You should probably point out that while the airside transfers avoid the need for Customs and Immigration, you will still need to pass through a Security checkpoint at the departure terminal

– Gagravarr
Mar 3 '16 at 21:50





You should probably point out that while the airside transfers avoid the need for Customs and Immigration, you will still need to pass through a Security checkpoint at the departure terminal

– Gagravarr
Mar 3 '16 at 21:50




1




1





Heathrow also have a pretty good flight connections guide on their website, which has maps, terminal information etc

– Gagravarr
Mar 4 '16 at 14:09





Heathrow also have a pretty good flight connections guide on their website, which has maps, terminal information etc

– Gagravarr
Mar 4 '16 at 14:09

















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