Airport Guides and Connection Planning — TripBuffer

Airport Guides and Connection Planning

Every airport works a little differently. Terminal walks, security flow, immigration, baggage and where you pick up your ride home all change the timing you need. TripBuffer’s airport guides walk you through each one with friendly, practical advice so you arrive feeling prepared instead of guessing.

Pick the airport that matches your trip below. Each section links to the guides, transfer comparisons and calculators built around that airport — from layover timing and self-transfer planning to the easiest way into the city when you land.

London Heathrow (LHR)

Heathrow spreads four working terminals across a sizeable site, so a smooth connection usually comes down to knowing where you’re starting from and where you need to be. These guides cover the timing, the inter-terminal transfers and the best ways into central London.

London Gatwick (LGW)

Gatwick’s North and South terminals are joined by a short, free shuttle, and the train link into central London is one of the friendliest in the UK. These guides help you plan your timing and choose the route into town that fits your trip.

New York JFK

JFK is a big, multi-terminal airport with the handy AirTrain linking everything together. A little planning around terminal layout and the trip into Manhattan goes a long way to making your day feel relaxed.

Dubai International (DXB)

Dubai International is one of the world’s biggest hubs and a popular stopover on the way to or from Asia and Australia. These guides cover the layover timing, terminal layout and the easiest ways to spend a few hours in the city if your stopover is long enough.

Tools that work for every airport

Once you’ve picked your airport guides, run your real itinerary through the tools below. They use the same friendly logic the guides do — thinking about baggage, immigration, terminal changes and ticket type — so the buffer you get fits your actual trip.

Why airport-specific planning helps

“Arrive 2 hours early” is a useful starting point, but it works best when you tailor it to the airport you’re actually flying through. A 60-minute connection might feel relaxed at one terminal and a bit tight at another. A 90-minute Manhattan-to-JFK trip in the morning is very different from the same trip at 5 PM. Knowing the airport ahead of time makes the whole day easier.

The guides above are written to be friendly, practical and specific to each airport — so you can plan with confidence, pack the right buffer and enjoy your trip. Pick the guide that matches your itinerary, sanity-check the timing with a calculator, and you’re set.