Quick answer
The busiest Heathrow road and terminal windows are usually weekday 6:30am to 9:30am, Friday 3:30pm to 7:30pm, and holiday-weekend blocks. If you are leaving from Central London, adding a 30 to 40 minute buffer during these windows is usually sensible.
Heathrow busy-time table
| Window | Typical pressure level | What it affects most |
|---|---|---|
| Weekday 6:30am-9:30am | High | Westbound approach and terminal drop-off flow |
| Weekday 12pm-2pm | Medium | Arrival collections and curbside turnover |
| Friday 3:30pm-7:30pm | High | Terminal access and outbound London returns |
| Sunday evening | Medium | Arrival pickups, especially long-haul banks |
Terminal-specific notes
Terminal 5 pickups are usually efficient once coordinated, but early weekday waves still create stop-start handovers. Terminal 2 transfers can be slower when multiple long-haul flights land together.
What business travelers usually do
- Pre-book fixed pickups instead of waiting for app availability.
- Leave 15 to 20 minutes earlier than their first plan on weekday mornings.
- Use terminal-specific pickup pages instead of generic airport assumptions.
Related routes and pages
For route-level planning, see Canary Wharf to Heathrow, full Heathrow transfer coverage, and our London transfer cost guide.
Busiest Times at Heathrow - FAQ
Usually between 6:30am and 9:30am on weekdays, especially for Terminal 5 and Terminal 2 departure runs.
For long-haul flights, most travelers leave 3.5 to 4 hours before departure, and add extra time during peak windows.
They are different. Friday PM is usually heavier for outbound city traffic, while weekday AM is heavier for departure waves.
Yes. They reduce uncertainty because fare and driver details are confirmed before travel, even when traffic worsens.
Yes. Pickup flow and handover timing can differ by terminal, so terminal-specific guidance is usually more accurate.