Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Review: I try Eurostar Standard Premier from London to Amsterdam

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

This is our review of Standard Premier on the Eurostar rail service from London to Amsterdam.

Despite living in the catchment area of Eurostar for many years – including when it used to stop at Ashford International in Kent near my family home – I’ve never actually tried it. After winning the competition to name Eurostar’s latest cocktail in the Business Premier lounge last month I wanted to give the full Eurostar experience a go.

Since I saved them thousands of pounds from having to hire a cocktail branding agency, Eurostar was happy to give me a free ticket to try it out for Head for Points 😉

Eurostar e320

What is Standard Premier?

Eurostar offers three classes on its services: Standard, Standard Premier and Business Premier.

I will go into more detail on the differences between Standard Premier and Business Premier in a future article, but fundamentally they are quite similar: both feature the same spacious seats and a meal service, created by Raymond Blanc if you are in Business Premier.

The big differentiator is actually at the station: Business Premier gets you access to fast track check-in, security and immigration plus lounge access, whilst Standard Premier doesn’t.

At the station

So, as mentioned above, there is no priority security or check-in at St Pancras if you are travelling in Standard Premier – you join the great unwashed. That said, when I was there two hours before departure, the queues were surprisingly short, certainly compared to what we’ve seen at some airports recently.

Once through security and European immigration you are ejected into the main concourse in the middle of the station. Whilst it was virtually empty when I arrived it was heaving towards 6pm when two trains leave in quick succession:

Eurostar concourse

There isn’t a huge amount of seating so there are plenty of people sitting on the floor. Lounge access via Business Premier (or American Express Platinum!) is a big benefit here. I got lounge access as a courtesy from Eurostar so that I could cover it – my review of the Eurostar St Pancras Business Premier lounge is here.

In terms of some retail therapy there is a World Duty Free and Pret available.

Trains are announced twenty minutes prior to departure and when full it can be a bit of a rush. For some reason both the 18:01 to Paris and the 18:04 to Amsterdam were boarding from adjacent platforms, which made the rush even worse given the shared escalators. It would have been smarter to use platforms at different ends of the station to spread passengers out slightly.

It’s hard to beat the boarding experience, right in the middle of St Pancras with Tracey Emin’s artwork at the end:

Eurostar St Pancras

On board Eurostar Standard Premier

Standard Premier is at the back of the train at St Pancras, from Carriage 1 onwards.

My train was pretty much fully booked, so some of the photos below were taken at the end of my journey in Amsterdam. Apologies in advance for any continuity errors! The cabin offers a range of seating in a 1-2 layout:

Eurostar Standard Premier

As you can see, there are several face-on blocks with proper tables, great for families or groups:

Eurostar Standard Premier quad

The rest are normal ‘rows’ with half forward and half rear-facing:

Eurostar standard premier 2

(The crumbs are from guests, not because the train wasn’t cleaned.)

I was sat in one of these rows. The seat-backs are very high – higher than on a plane:

The seats are pretty firm – much firmer than I was expecting, not dissimilar to BA’s slimline seats on its A320s. That’s fine for a couple of hours to Paris but slightly less comfortable on the four hour journey to Amsterdam.

If you are sat in a pair of seats you get TWO armrests, so no fighting about who gets it!

The legroom is much better than on BA Club Europe:

Eurostar Standard Premier legroom

In between the seats in front you’ll find a UK and EU plug sockets plus two USBs:

Eurostar Standard Premier connectivity

A tray table flips down, although annoyingly it is fixed in position which means it is quite far away from you.

Above the tray table is a little mirror!

Eurostar Standard Premier mirror

There’s also a personal reading light.

One thing that airlines have done well in recent years is introducing mood lighting depending on the time of day. This is something Eurostar could take inspiration from – on a four hour journey, especially in the evening, the bright overhead light gets a bit exhausting. Having pre-programmed lighting would be a simple but effective way of changing this.

Standard Premier food on Eurostar

One of the key features of Standard Premier, as per the Eurostar website, is a “light meal, served at your seat”. It is VERY light.

The speed of service is pretty quick because I believe the same staff then head to Business Premier to do the full meal service there. The meal was served within minutes of leaving St Pancras.

The choice was between chicken and a vegetarian quiche option, both served cold. I went for the chicken, which came with a teeny portion of potato salad:

Eurostar Standard Premier meal

If you have dietary requirements these can be specified online prior to departure.

The size of the ‘main’ course is about the same size as a starter in Club World. It really is ‘light’ and there were no vegetables to speak of. There is definitely room for improvement here. You could easily serve something like a lasagne or shepherds pie and leave the ‘fancy’ food for Business Premier.

After stopping at Brussels, just over halfway, the crew came through again with a second drink service and a choice of snacks – nuts or a Kit Kat:

Eurostar Standard Premier snack

WiFi on board

There is WiFi on board which is free to use for all passengers. Connecting is easy, but because the connection is reliant on 3G and 4G it isn’t perfect. Whilst at some points it was pretty fast it was also prone to dropping out for a minute or two.

Arriving in Amsterdam Centraal Station

Arrival is easy, and one of the attractions of taking the Eurostar. All document checks are done in London so you literally just walk out of the station – easy peasy.

Conclusion

Even though it clocks in at four hours door to door (or platform to platform), taking Eurostar to Amsterdam takes no longer than flying unless you live close to the airport. It’s a lot less hassle than having to get to and from airports on both ends – I was checking in to my hotel within 15 minutes of arriving in Amsterdam.

There are two ways of looking at Standard Premier, I think, and both offer good value.

If you treat it as an upgrade from Standard, and the price difference can be as low as £20, you are getting a lot for your money. The far bigger seat is the key benefit, of course, but you also get the meal with wine. The meals won’t win any awards any time soon but it is certainly worth factoring in to the upgrade maths.

Comparing Standard Premier to Business Premier, you are making a large saving for giving up some flexibility, lounge access and fast track. We’ll look at what Business Premier offers in a future review.

We haven’t mentioned Club Eurostar, the loyalty programme, in this review. Rob wrote a full review of Club Eurostar here, and as you can transfer in American Express Membership Rewards points it is easy to top up the points you earn to enough for a free ticket.

You can find out more, and book, on the Eurostar website here. Standard Premier is available from £70 one-way to Paris in June.

Stay tuned for my review of Eurostar Business Premier, as well as reviews of the W Amsterdam hotel and Andaz hotels in Amsterdam.


How to get Club Eurostar points and lounge access from UK credit cards

How to get Club Eurostar points and lounge access from UK credit cards (April 2024)

Club Eurostar does not have a UK credit card.  However, you can earn Club Eurostar points by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards

Cards earning Membership Rewards points include:

Membership Rewards points convert at 15:1 into Club Eurostar points.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, so you will get the equivalent of 1 Club Eurostar point for every £15 you spend.

American Express Platinum comes with a great Eurostar benefit – Eurostar lounge access!  

You can enter any Eurostar lounge, irrespective of your ticket type, simply by showing The Platinum Card at the desk.  No guests are allowed but you can get entry for your partner by issuing them with a free supplementary Amex Platinum card on your account.

Comments (75)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Paul says:

    The sooner there is real competition on the cross channel railways the better. When you see and experience the service on Thalys, Italian trains and Austrian business class for the fares charged and compare to the service and fares charged by Eurostar you can again see how it is rip off Britain

    • JDB says:

      Eurostar is majority owned by Thalys, so not sure where the ‘rip off Britain’ comes into it…

      • ChrisC says:

        Eurostar is majority owned by SNCF who are also the majority shareholder of the Thalys company

        Eurostar and Thalys are being merged into one company and their majority shareholder is still SNCF.

        • RussellH says:

          SNCF are not the most flexible and forward thinking organisation.

          While Rhys’ meal does not look that impressive, at least it exists. Paris-Lyon in first class in 2019 had no at seat service at all.

          • Bob says:

            Maybe the last time a meal was served on Paris-Lyon was on Le Mistral service.

            I may think there has never been a meal service in fist class since the start of the TGV.

    • RussellH says:

      Interesting comment. Last time I travelled SP on Eurostar, followed by Thalys to Köln, which was probably 2010, the Thalys food was just a filled roll, while the Eurostar meal in SP was effectively three small plate portions served on the one rectangular plate, and much, much better quality.
      I overheard several passengers complimenting the food to the conductor as they left the train.
      This was on the old Alstom shrunken TGV Eurostar sets

  • ChrisC says:

    I did this in February but on the 11.04 departure.

    Thought the meal size was perfectly adequate in size. Came with proper salad.

    The menu is available on the website.

    Got a packet of crispsas well I recall.

    As well as a couple of offers of tea/coffee there was at least one other full drinks run on the leg to BRU.

  • Mike says:

    It’s a shame the government wouldn’t spend the £700m linking HS2 to HS1 and given the north access to the continent. Night trains from Scotland and the NW of England would have been great (day trains too obviously).

    • ChrisC says:

      Well it would have been much more than that by now plus the cost benefit analysis simply wasn’t good enough.

      Heck they have even reduced the number of platforms at EUS from 11 to 10 to save some money now despite the fact it will reduce operation flexibility in decades to come.

      • RussellH says:

        Thatcherite values continue to rule. The price is what matters, not the value you get for the money spent.

    • RussellH says:

      It was EasyJet + Ryanair (and the ones that did not make it – Buzz, Go, bmiBaby etc) that killed the overnight market before it started.

      They were not on the horizon at the planning stage, but by the time the Eurostar service first started, they were already quite big.
      They almost killed off overnight trains in mainland Europe too, but now awareness of the climate consequences of shorthaul flying are growing, people are coming back to night trains.

  • Colin MacKinnon says:

    They built/extended platforms at Edinburgh (and maybe Glasgow) and built Nightstar sleeper trains for the Chunnel – but then parked the trains for around five years before being sold to Canada.

    Thought to have cost around £500 million back 29 years ago – which would have paid for the HS1-2 link!

    Ps HS1 also was owned / still is? / by Canadians!

    • Rich says:

      Yes and didn’t they upgrade the North London Line ready to act as the link between the West Coast Main Line and HS1 at St Pancras?

  • Colin MacKinnon says:

    Meant around 20-25 years ago. Fat finger on phone!

  • qrfan says:

    “on a four hour journey, especially in the evening, the bright overhead light gets a bit exhausting”. I think Rob needs to enforce a few more late nights in a brightly lit office so you can become accustomed to this environment.

    • Rob says:

      No-one stays in the office beyond 6 and we’re usually long gone before that.

      • Colin MacKinnon says:

        That’s what HR told the builders when I worked on a daily newspaper – and the contractor turned up half an hour before first edition, amazed to see a buzzing office!

  • Pb says:

    Unfortunately the current Eurostars are less comfortable, less stable and complete with internal searchlights for illumination , bring back the old . The food service is inferior to the original , I’m afraid it’s SNCF influence is doing us no favours , they need competition which I suspect is being kept at bay by means nefarious.

    • Tim G says:

      I completely agree. The old Eurostars were lovely. Plush, quiet, relaxing and comfortable. The interiors were just superb. The new trains are dreadful.

  • novelty-socks says:

    Rhys named a cocktail in the Eurostar lounge? I’m surprised you haven’t mentioned this before 😉

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.