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Virgin Atlantic Launching Phuket Flights, A Reflection Of The Carrier’s Struggles

Virgin Atlantic has announced its newest long haul destination, with flights commencing next fall. I suppose it’s not terribly surprising, though it kind of reflects the SkyTeam carrier’s challenging position in the market…

Virgin Atlantic adds London to Phuket route

As of October 18, 2026, Virgin Atlantic will launch a new 3x weekly flight between London Heathrow (LHR) and Phuket (HKT). The airline will use the Boeing 787-9 for its route to Thailand, and it will operate with the following schedule:

VS214 London to Phuket departing 12:00PM arriving 7:10AM (+1 day)
VS215 Phuket to London departing 9:20AM arriving 4:00PM

Virgin Atlantic will fly from London to Phuket

The 6,158-mile flight will operate eastbound on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays, in a flight time of 12hr10min, and westbound on Thursdays, Saturdays, and Mondays, in a flight time of 13hr40min. The flight should become bookable as of November 26, 2025.

Virgin Atlantic’s Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners are configured with 258 seats, including 31 business class seats, 35 premium economy seats, and 192 economy class seats. While the cabins of these planes will get (a much needed) overhaul, that project is only starting in 2028.

Virgin Atlantic will fly a Boeing 787 to Phuket

This will be Virgin Atlantic’s only route to Thailand, and it’ll also be the only nonstop flight between London Heathrow and Phuket (TUI Airways has a seasonal flight from London Gatwick).

Here’s how Virgin Atlantic Chief Commercial Officer Juha Jarvinen describes this:

“We’re thrilled to introduce our new direct service to Phuket, giving our customers a flavour of one of Southeast Asia’s most captivating destinations. As well as making the trip more convenient, they can enjoy exploring Thailand’s unique heritage, natural beauty and delicious cuisine. We can’t wait for our customers to experience our trademark hospitality on their next unforgettable journey.”

My take on Virgin Atlantic’s Thailand flights

Virgin Atlantic’s new route between London and Phuket really sums up the challenging market position that Virgin Atlantic constantly finds itself in. The airline is 49% owned by Delta, so the carrier’s biggest focus is on its transatlantic joint venture with Delta and Air France-KLM.

But aside from that, Virgin Atlantic can’t seem to figure out what to do. There’s a certain irony to Virgin Atlantic’s new longest route also being a leisure route that’s not necessarily known for being very high yielding, where the airline is promoting how you can book package holidays starting at £999 per person. I mean, TUI is the only other airline that bothers to operate in the market, and that says a lot.

Virgin Atlantic’s only other route to the eastern part of Asia is a service to Seoul Incheon (ICN) that’s launching in the spring of 2026. While that flight will feed into SkyTeam partner Korean Air’s network, it’s likely only happening because Virgin Atlantic was literally given the slot pair for the route, as part of a concession for the Korean Air and Asiana merger.

So it says something when the airline can’t make Hong Kong, or Singapore, or Tokyo work, but thinks its best bet is Phuket. As lucrative as Heathrow can be, it’s really tough to be in the number two spot at an airport (behind British Airways), while lacking short haul connectivity.

Phuket will be Virgin Atlantic’s new longest route

Bottom line

As of the fall of 2026, Virgin Atlantic will launch seasonal flights between London and Phuket. This will be Virgin Atlantic’s longest route, and it’ll also be the carrier’s only service to Southeast Asia. Obviously there’s seasonal demand between London and Phuket, though one would assume the yields aren’t great, between the competitive landscape and the length of the flight.

But yeah, this isn’t really surprising. Aside from the North America joint venture with Delta, Virgin Atlantic otherwise seems heavily focused on leisure destinations (or markets where it can get subsidies or some other upside).

What do you make of Virgin Atlantic launching Phuket flights?

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