London’s Heathrow Airport has reported an exceptional performance in January 2026, achieving its busiest start to the year on record while maintaining industry-leading service levels. New figures show that more than 6.4 million passengers passed through the airport last month, surpassing previous January figures and highlighting continued strong demand for travel despite challenging weather conditions across North America and Europe. Over several peak days, passenger movements topped 250,000, outpacing historic performance and illustrating robust early-year activity at the UK’s main aviation hub.
Operational excellence remained a key feature of Heathrow’s January output, with the airport again recognised as the most punctual hub in Europe. The introduction of new security lanes across all terminals, designed to speed up passenger flow while maintaining safety, was completed during the month and contributed to improved processing efficiency.
The airport also strengthened its role in global trade, handling nearly 125,000 tonnes of cargo in January, a testament to Heathrow’s strategic importance to the UK’s international freight network and its contribution to more than £200 billion of trade annually.
Beyond the headline traffic volumes, independent industry recognition continued, with Heathrow being named Best UK Airport for the fifth successive year at the Travel Weekly Globe Travel Awards. High satisfaction scores from passengers, with more than 95% rating their experience as good or excellent, reflect the airport’s commitment to providing value and quality service.
“I am proud of the strong service, great value and unrivalled global connectivity Heathrow provides to our customers. We remain Europe’s largest airport, but the latest figures show we may lose that position in 2026, and we cannot keep driving growth for the UK economy without more capacity. That’s why Heathrow expansion is so critical. The decisions ministers and the CAA take this year are essential to enable the delivery of the UK’s flagship growth project, secure planning permission by 2029, and ensure the UK has the flight and cargo capacity that it deserves.”
– Thomas Woldbye, Chief Executive at Heathrow
As Heathrow builds on this strong start to the year, its performance in January underlines the ongoing appeal of international travel and the airport’s pivotal role in supporting passengers, airlines, and the broader UK economy.






























