CASTRIES, St Lucia — British Airways Expands St Lucia Flights with a new daily standalone route from London Gatwick, adding more than 51,000 seats for the 2026-27 winter season as the island faces tighter UK visa requirements and the loss of other direct UK services.
The Saint Lucia Tourism Authority said the new schedule will begin Oct. 25, 2026, with daily flights to Hewanorra International Airport. The expansion comes at a sensitive time, after the United Kingdom imposed visa requirements on St Lucian nationals over asylum concerns linked to the Citizenship by Investment program.
The added British Airways capacity is also significant because other UK carriers have recently pulled back from the market. TUI axed direct St Lucia flights from Gatwick, while Virgin moved to drop its St Lucia flights, leaving British Airways with a more critical role in protecting winter airlift.
Winter airlift shifts as British Airways Expands St Lucia Flights
Tourism officials said the new British Airways schedule will feature later departure times from London, allowing for easier same-day connections from major European markets, including France and Germany. That change is expected to widen St Lucia’s reach beyond its traditional UK visitor base during the peak winter travel period.
The increase in seats matters well beyond the airport. Hotels, villas, taxi operators, excursion providers, restaurants and other tourism-dependent businesses rely heavily on steady winter arrivals, making airlift one of the most important drivers of visitor spending across the wider economy.
The Saint Lucia Tourism Authority said British Airways will continue its tagged summer service as part of its seasonal Caribbean schedule. For the winter season, however, the move to a daily standalone operation gives St Lucia a more stable and direct link to one of its most important long-haul source markets.
UK visa changes complicate wider travel ties
While the additional flights strengthen inbound tourism access, the broader travel environment between St Lucia and the United Kingdom has become more difficult for St Lucians themselves.
The UK’s new visa requirement adds cost, paperwork, and waiting time for people traveling for family visits, education, business, and other personal reasons. The policy shift has cast a shadow over the bilateral relationship, particularly because of the longstanding historical, social, and family ties connecting St Lucia and the UK.
That contrast gives the British Airways expansion added weight. More visitors are set to gain easier access to St Lucia this winter, even as St Lucians face tighter entry conditions when traveling to the same country.
For ordinary travelers and families, that imbalance is not abstract. It affects mobility, planning, and affordability, and it places fresh attention on how international scrutiny tied to the CIP program can carry consequences beyond government policy and into everyday life.
Tourism officials frame move as confidence signal
Tourism Minister Dr. Ernest Hilaire said the expanded British Airways service reflects continued confidence in St Lucia as a destination and will help bring more visitors to the island during the winter season. The Saint Lucia Tourism Authority also said the increased capacity supports its broader push to strengthen visitor arrivals from the UK and Europe.
British Airways has served St Lucia for more than five decades, with its first connection dating back to July 1971. The airline currently offers Club World, World Traveller Plus, and World Traveller service on the route.
The expansion delivers an important airlift win for St Lucia at a time when the island is under pressure to maintain market access and protect tourism demand. With UK visa rules tightening and rival carriers stepping back, the new daily British Airways route offers a needed buffer, but it also underscores how quickly external policy decisions and airline strategy can reshape travel ties for a small tourism-dependent state.





























This means that BA will increase flight costs with no competition.