K

Kings Heathrow Taxi

Heathrow forecourt charge

The £7 Heathrow drop-off charge.

£7 per vehicle entry into Heathrow's terminal forecourts. Introduced 2017 to fund clean-air infrastructure. Every operator pays it; most pass it to the passenger as a separate line item. Kings absorbs it into the published fare — what you book is what you pay.

Charge

£7

Per

Vehicle entry

Forecourt limit

10 min

In your Kings fare

Included

What is the Heathrow drop-off charge?

It's a £7 fee paid by any vehicle entering Heathrow's terminal forecourts to drop a passenger off or collect one. Introduced in 2017 at £5 to fund clean-air zone infrastructure; raised to £7 in subsequent years.

Cameras at the forecourt entrances log the registration. Payment is made by the operator (or driver) via Heathrow's online portal or app, typically within 24 hours. Unpaid charges incur a £40-80 penalty.

Who pays — passenger or driver?

The vehicle operator pays Heathrow. What happens between operator and passenger varies:

Why has Heathrow introduced this?

Two reasons publicly stated: fund clean-air investment (electric airside vehicles, cleaner ground operations), and reduce forecourt congestion. Critics argue it's revenue-raising — Heathrow collects ~£40 million/year from the charge across all four terminals.

Whatever the motive, the charge exists and will likely keep rising. Gatwick has copied it (£6); Stansted (£7); Luton (£5); Birmingham (£5). Most major UK airports now charge.

Are there any exemptions?

Yes, two:

Private hire (PHV) operators — including Kings — pay the full £7 per entry.

How long can I stay on the forecourt?

10 minutes maximum. Beyond that, enforcement officers move vehicles on; staying longer triggers additional charges. This is why Kings collects from the short-stay car park (Level 1) rather than the kerbside — a phone-call pickup avoids forecourt time entirely.

See why short-stay pickup wins on cost and time for the full background.

Is the £7 fair?

It's a real operating cost we live with. The question for customers is whether the operator hides it in a quote-then-add-it dance, or absorbs it into a transparent published fare. The price you pay on arrival is what matters — not what you saw on the click-through.

For how Kings builds the £7 + tolls + fuel into a single fixed fare, see how every fare is calculated.

Fixed fares with the £7 built in

What you book is what you pay.