If you are searching for cheap flights to or from Tenerife for July dates, you are not alone, I’m also trying to guess when is the perfect moment. It is one of the most competitive routes in summer, and prices can swing wildly. Below is what I learned from previous trips. However not all Nomads might need to be as price conscious as some of us, so this is info might not be useful to anyone other than me. lol.
You know the feeling one day you will see £29. The next day the exact same flight is £120.
If you fly this route regularly, you will know that feeling more than I thought possible. Outside of peak season, it is not unusual for me to grab flights for £16 to £18, but more often around £25 to £30. That’s become my mental benchmark (and that’s crazy cheap for flying, so it weird but it makes everything north of £30 seem expensive… I’m tight).
So when I’m looking at July dates and seeing c£50, it feels expensive. Even if, objectively, it is not a bad price for peak summer.
Cheapest Tenerife to London Stansted Flights in July
Flights from Tenerife to London Stansted Airport in July are not as cheap as spring, but deals still exist.
Typical price ranges according to chatgpt are about this:
- £29 to £50 one way for the cheapest fares
- £50 to £80 return if booked at the right time
- £80 to £150 or more return if booked too early or too late
Important: the lowest prices usually mean midweek travel, no baggage, and early or late flights (but as I not controlled by holiday dates and booking time off I’m quite fortunate).
Best Time to Book July Flights
The single most important factor is timing.
Best booking window: seems to be 6 to 10 weeks before departure (I’m about to put this to the test, as you will see later I have taken some screen grabs as of today 31/03/2026).
For July travel, that means booking in May to early June. This is the window where prices tend to dip before prices peak drastically.
Right now, if you are seeing around £50 like me, then you are in that frustrating middle phase. Not outrageously expensive, but not cheap enough to feel like a win.
Waiting can make sense here (or I might regret my decision).
I’ve taken these screen grabs of skyscanner on the 31/3/2026, I’m going to wait until mid May, and therefore follow my own advice, it feels risky, but for the purposes of a good blog post I’m willing to get my fingers burnt. Some of these flights are the stupid o’clock flights… so I’ll also take a screen grab of the specific dates I’m interested in.




This is the flight I am interested in… lets see if I should have paid the £46/47 on the 31st March


When Flights Get Expensive
Understanding when not to book is just as important.
Too early (3 to 5 months ahead)
Prices are often £80 to £150 return. Airlines test higher pricing first.
Too late (last 2 to 3 weeks)
Prices jump to £120 to £250 or more. Cheap seats are already gone.
This is Another Mistake That Can Cost You Hundreds
Most people focus on timing. Fewer people realise how they book matters just as much.
If you book a return ticket with a budget airline like Ryanair and you miss the outbound flight, your return is usually cancelled automatically.
This is called a no show policy.
I found this out the hard way. I turned up at the airport to catch my return flight, only to be told it had been cancelled because I had not taken the outbound. Occasionally my outbound plans changed, or I just get to the airport with too little time.
At that point you have no leverage. You still need to get home, and the only option is to buy a new ticket at the highest last minute fare.
That can easily cost two or three times what you originally paid.
Why Booking Two One Way Flights Is Safer
Instead of booking a return, consider booking two separate one way flights.
Benefits:
- You do not lose your return if plans change
- You can mix airlines and times
- You keep flexibility
On Tenerife to London Stansted, there is usually no price advantage to booking a return anyway. Budget airlines price each leg independently.
Will the US Israel and Iran Conflict Push Prices Up
This is a new factor in 2026 and it is worth addressing.
Rising tensions involving the US, Israel, and Iran have pushed oil prices higher, which increases jet fuel costs. In theory, that puts upward pressure on flight prices.
But for short haul routes like Tenerife to London Stansted, prices in the next one to two months are still driven mostly by demand, seat availability, and airline pricing strategy.
Fuel costs matter more over longer periods. They do not usually cause sudden spikes within a typical booking window.
What this likely means in practice:
- The absolute cheapest fares may be slightly higher this year
- The £16 to £18 deals may be rarer
- The new cheap range may sit closer to £25 to £40
So if you are waiting for prices to drop from £55, that still makes sense. Just be realistic about how low they are likely to go.
How to Find the Cheapest Flights
These small decisions make a big difference:
Fly midweek
Tuesday and Wednesday are usually cheapest
Avoid peak times
Early morning and late evening flights tend to be cheaper, but factor in the full journey. If you have to pay for a taxi because public transport is not running, you can easily wipe out any savings. There is no point saving £30 on a flight only to spend it getting to or from the airport.
Travel light
Adding baggage can double your fare
Stay flexible
Changing your dates by even one day can reduce the price significantly
What Not to Do
- Do not wait until late June hoping prices will drop
- Take the May or early June price that works for your budget
- Do not assume returns are safer or cheaper
- Do not book only weekend flights if you want the lowest fare
Final Answer When Should You Book
If you are trying to get the cheapest flights from Tenerife to London Stansted in July:
- Book 6 to 10 weeks before departure
- Aim for £30 to £50 one way
- Travel midweek if possible
- Consider booking two one way tickets instead of a return
If you are currently seeing around £55, it is reasonable to wait and watch. Just do not leave it too late.
Follow those rules and you will consistently beat the average prices most travellers end up paying.
And more importantly, you will avoid the kind of expensive mistake that only shows up when you are already standing at the airport.
A Final Note
This is based on my own experience flying this route regularly. I am not always right, and prices do not always behave exactly the same way.
So take this as a practical guide, not a guarantee. And if it does not work out perfectly, please do not shout at me.