Get 20% off Heathrow Airport Reservations
Ends: 28th Jun 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Booking airport parking is one of those necessary evils of modern travel - like removing your shoes in security or pretending to enjoy Pret. It’s not glamorous, and no one’s Instagramming their long-stay experience at Luton. But if you’re going to leave your car somewhere for a week while you…Booking airport parking is one of those necessary evils of modern travel - like removing your shoes in security or…
Ends: 28th Jun 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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Ends: 1+ month
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Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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Booking airport parking is one of those necessary evils of modern travel - like removing your shoes in security or pretending to enjoy Pret. It’s not glamorous, and no one’s Instagramming their long-stay experience at Luton. But if you’re going to leave your car somewhere for a week while you chase sun or business, it may as well not cost more than the flight. That’s where Park and Go comes in, promising a mildly less painful way to part with your vehicle (and your money) before you jet off.
Park and Go is essentially a middleman. They don’t own car parks, they connect you to them. Think of it as the Skyscanner of airport parking - if Skyscanner only searched for places to leave your Ford Focus. With over 100 car parks across 23 UK airports, they offer online booking for most of the usual suspects: Heathrow, Gatwick, Manchester, Stansted, and a generous smattering of regional options like Teesside and Humberside (yes, apparently people fly from there too).
The process is simple enough. Select your airport, enter your drop-off and pick-up times, and the site gives you a list of parking options - on-site, park and ride, meet and greet, and the more questionably named "secure" off-site services. Prices vary, often wildly. A week's parking at Heathrow might cost you £60 or £160 depending on how close you want to be to your departure gate - or how willing you are to hand your keys to a stranger in a high-vis vest.
Park and Go does offer voucher codes and seasonal promotions, though the discounts tend to be modest. Think 10% off, not "free valet and champagne on arrival." There’s a subscription newsletter too, promising offers and updates. Realistically, that means the odd discount code and the occasional reminder that airport parking still costs too much.
One current deal we tested knocked £7 off a £70 booking at Gatwick. Not life-changing, but enough for a Pret sandwich and a flat white. Or, more accurately, one Pret sandwich.
The site itself is a bit of a time capsule - functional, if not exactly elegant. You won’t find slick design or AI-driven recommendations here. The dropdown menus for selecting times look like they were designed in a more patient decade. Still, it works. And when you're half-packed at 1am before a 6am flight, that's all you really need.
Payment is secure, and Park and Go makes a point of mentioning that more than once. Rightly so. Handing over your car is one thing, handing over your card details is another.
With over 5,000 reviews on Trustpilot and 20,000 internal car park reviews, there's plenty of user feedback. As with most aggregator platforms, the reviews are a mixed bag: some glowing, others pointing out the occasional missed shuttle or ambiguous signage. The average seems to hover around the "fine" to "decent" end of the spectrum - no disasters, no miracles.
Park and Go won’t revolutionise travel. But for those who appreciate a bit of order before the chaos of air travel, it’s a quietly useful service. The deals are real, if not spectacular. The interface is dated, but not broken. And the whole thing works well enough to keep you from panic-Googling "cheap parking near Heathrow" at 2am.
It’s not sexy. It’s not fun. But it might just save you enough for a taxi home when your return flight is delayed, your suitcase is missing, and your car battery is flat. Welcome back to Britain.
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⭐ Rating: 3.9 / 5 (44 votes)