Proposals for new Manchester – London train service announced

Michael Holden - Editor 8 comments 2 Min Read
WMR Liveried Class 730 enters service on the 06:04 Bletchley - London Euston service in November 2023 // Credit: DownOnTheStour

London Northwestern Railway has announced proposals for a new train service connecting Manchester with London Euston via the West Midlands.

Under the proposals, London Northwestern Railway would extend London Euston – Crewe services to , and services between Stafford and Crewe would extend through to Manchester Airport.

As well as a boost for Manchester passengers, the plans would create direct links from , Lichfield, and to the city and Warrington.

The services between Manchester Victoria and London Euston would use the operator's Class 730 electric trains, with each 10-car train being able to carry more than 1,200 passengers.

LNWR would work with other operators and to find a best case solution to tie in with upgrades at Manchester Victoria and, of course, the TransPennine Route Upgrade.

If approved, the new services could start from May 2026 once crew training is complete.

“This proposal puts passengers at the heart of the railway and is the common sense solution to increase connectivity between the North West and the West Midlands following the cancellation of the northern leg of HS2.

“With platform space at Euston at a premium, the best way to provide new journey opportunities to Manchester is simply to extend existing services, rather than trying to squeeze more trains onto the congested West Coast Main Line.

“Additionally, unlike the Open Access model, the millions of pounds of extra revenue our proposals would generate will be returned to the taxpayer, providing a win-win for rail passengers.

“Just as we have shown with our existing long-distance services to Birmingham and Liverpool, our green and environmentally-friendly new electric trains will provide an affordable alternative to the car and coach, with fares up to 50% cheaper than the main intercity operator.

Ian McConnell, managing director of West Midlands Trains, operator of London Northwestern Railway

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8 Comments
  • This certainly looks like a better way to deliver competition between London and Manchester than setting up new OOAs.
    Agree with others that it would be really beneficial if some trains could be routed through Northampton.

  • @Mr David Whipp We were indeed told that privatisation would bring improvements. Unfortunately these improvements have yet to materialise. We were promised more efficient trains and cheaper fares. Weve got a service that is unusable and a rip off. Unless you know youre travelling 3 months ahead. Those prices should be the Any Time Walk-up fares.
    Far better to have BR back and do it properly second time round

    • Where were you when cross country services went from 2 hourly to twice hourly?

      Since covid the government have taken more control and services have become very unreliable.

      It’s not at all black and white. Privatisation can work if the right incentives are in place and it’s not all about cost reduction. Similarly public ownership can be really bad. if governments cannot afford to invest in services.

      If we pretend that public ownership will solve all the problems we are just going to waste another 20 years.

  • Be appreciated if some of these services stopped at Northampton as this town would benefit from direct trains to Manchester Victoria and Manchester Airport.

  • Would this future service go via Northampton as this would be a great advantage as I am from Greater Manchester myself, and would save a lot of time and changes at other stations

      • The Stafford – Crewe Service runs through Stoke, so if that is the route to be extended, it would be a direct rail link, although most likely still be quicker to change at Piccadilly if it calls at all the stations between Crewe and the Airport.

  • If it’s priced competitively and doesn’t take too much longer than Avanti and their monopoly, then I think that lots of passengers will be glad of an alternative. After all, weren’t we told that privatisation would be better good for competition. I’ve ridden on similar trains from Manchester to Edinburgh and they are if anything better than the narrow Pendelinos that are the only trains available on Manchester to London services.

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