Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

TODAY’S THE DAY: Take a direct Elizabeth line train from Heathrow to central London

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

It may have taken a large proportion of my lifetime to build, but today is the day that you can finally take an Elizabeth line train directly from Heathrow Airport to central London.

You can also travel directly from Heathrow through the centre to Abbey Wood. What you CANNOT do without a change of train is travel from Heathrow to Shenfield, although you can now travel from Paddington to Shenfield direct.

Today is also the first day that full Sunday services are running, and also sees increased frequencies between Paddington and Whitechapel.

Elizabeth Line open direct to Heathrow

To quote the official TfL press release:

  • customers travelling from Reading and Heathrow are now able to travel east all the way to Abbey Wood without needing to change at Paddington mainline station
  • customers travelling from Shenfield will be able to travel west all the way to Paddington without needing to change at Liverpool Street mainline station
  • journeys from the east to destinations beyond Paddington, including towards Heathrow or Reading, will be possible by changing trains and waiting on the same platform at any central London Elizabeth line station for the next direct train. Given the layout of the station, changing trains at Whitechapel is likely to be easiest for customers.

TfL claims that:

People landing at Heathrow Airport will now be able to travel straight through central London on a direct train to areas such as Farringdon and Canary Wharf in as little as 36 and 45 minutes respectively at weekends and 40 and 51 minutes respectively during the week.

Customers will also able to use the Elizabeth line seven days a week following the start of Sunday services through central London. The frequency of services in the central section between Paddington and Whitechapel has increased from 12 trains per hour all day to up to 22 trains per hour in peak times and 16 trains per hour during off-peak.

The full peak timetable, which will see 24 trains per hour during the peak between Paddington and Whitechapel, is on track to be in place by May 2023. 

Elizabeth line route

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said:

“I’m delighted that from Sunday people will be able to benefit from fast and direct Elizabeth line services into central London, seven days a week. This development is a huge moment for the capital’s connectivity, revolutionising the way we travel across London, allowing people to travel from Stratford in the east of London to Paddington in the west of London in just 19 minutes, and Ealing Broadway to Canary Wharf in just over 30 minutes.

“Services running on Sundays through central London will make thousands of journeys quicker, easier and more comfortable. Now services from outside London are connected with the stations in centre of the capital, people can be quickly transported on the Elizabeth line all the way through the city.

This new stage of the Elizabeth line will bring a huge boost to our city – including encouraging people to make the most of the capital and will help support businesses in the heart of our city. I’m so proud of this transformational addition to our public transport network. The Elizabeth line is helping to build a better London – a fairer, greener and more prosperous city for all Londoners.”

Elizabeth Line open direct to Heathrow

What are the Heathrow timings?

When it comes to Heathrow, there will be six trains per hour.

All six will serve Terminals 2 & 3, whilst four will continue on to Terminal 4. Just two trains per hour – one every 30 minutes – will operate to Terminal 5.

(EDIT: the comments below imply that it is only four per hour – two to T5 and two to T4 – until next Spring.)

This is a blow to British Airways although better than planned given that running to Terminal 5 was never part of the original plan for Crossrail. Still, with many more passengers travelling from Terminal 5 versus Terminal 4 it doesn’t make a huge amount of sense.

A trip from Heathrow to Farringdon will cost between £10.70 and £12.70. This is thanks to a £7.20 ‘Heathrow premium’ charge that TFL is charging over Piccadilly Line fares, in part to pay for access to Heathrow’s rail tunnels which are owned by the airport. It is worth adding a Railcard to your Oyster Card, if you have one, to get a 33% discount on off-peak fares.

Given that the Head for Points office is only a couple of minutes from Liverpool Street, we are obviously keen to try out the new through service to Heathrow as soon as we can. Look out for a report.

Comments (158)

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

  • Concerto says:

    I hate the current trend of adding a premium surcharge to airport services. Brussels is a real example of this, not to mention MAD, PMI (€5 extra on the buses) and dozens of others. Used to have it in GVA back in the 90s when the airport train line was still new. Rail fares were based on distance and the distance from central Geneva to GVA was officially 6km (the train line does a bit of a loop to get there), but it was priced as 16km. The Swiss soon saw it as an unnecessary stupidity and got rid of it.

    I think Doncaster Sheffield airport might come back to life at some point in the future, just the way Manston MSE in Kent is apparently doing so at the moment.

    • Rob says:

      Peel can’t wait to build some super profitable warehouses on the site, which was likely the plan all along. The local authority even built a new motorway link road for them.

      • Lady London says:

        Peel (not just on this but also the ports where they are) don’t sound like nice people.

    • Numpty says:

      A single ticket on Edinburgh tram is £1.80. Add in airport stop and it’s £6.50.

    • Honest John says:

      When many years ago at a conference I talked to the proposers of Cross Rail I asked whether the service would charge ‘normal fares like Brithish Rail and the Underground or high fares like the Heathrow Express. I was assured the fares would be ‘normal’. I am not impressed that this has not proved to be true.

      • lumma says:

        It’s not high fares like the Heathrow Express though. Furthermore, it’s subject to the daily cap, so a tourist seeing a lot of London the same day doesn’t pay much to use it.

  • LostAntipod says:

    While the press releases say you can travel all the way from Reading to central london or points east without changing, the reality is if you live around reading, twyford, maidenhead you’ll shave half an hour off a trip to Bond st by catching a faster GWR train to paddington and changing there, than sitting on an all stops tube service.

    • Farzana Mohammed says:

      So is there a cost benefit to using tube over GWR from reading?

      • LostAntipod says:

        Im not a fare nerd so i may miss something, but right now on the trainline app it seems an anytime day single reading to paddington is the same £27.60 whether you take 25 mins GWR or 53 mins Elizabeth Line to get there.
        An article in the Reading paper says Elizabeth will be £24.40 from january when contactless payment is made avaiable. Presumably that will let you take advantage of daily and weekly fare caps if you travel about in zones 1-6. (However – in classic british railways joined-up thinking – you cant use an oyster card anywhere west of west drayton, only tap-and-pay with a credit or debit card. )

        • lumma says:

          An off peak return to Reading with a Network Railcard is significantly cheaper than pay as you go. Peak time I think contactless is cheaper.

  • BJ says:

    Today is the day they should switch off all the down escalators on the underground network to save electricity and cut fares…wins all round.

    • Thywillbedone says:

      Maybe shut off the up escalators …better payback as would help with the obesity epidemic. Amazes me how even the able-bodied only re-discover their ability to put one foot in front of the other at the very last moment on an escalator, like it is some sort of amusement park ride….

    • Numpty says:

      Google the video on the 2 Chinese girls that send their luggage down the escalator ahead of them! It shouldn’t be funny.

  • will says:

    I wonder what the payback on those tunnels looks like as an isolated return on investment?

    My instinct is that they are a very good example of the perils of allowing a private company to monopolise a public service.

  • MT says:

    So are trains running all the way to Heathrow now from Central without a change at Paddington? My understanding was this wasn’t happening until next year. If so is it starting in Abbey Wood trains that will go to Heathrow?

  • Tim Jackson says:

    Strange to see the line map showing Liverpool Street a being on the Northern Line. Is it a mistake?

    • Chris says:

      No – it’s not a mistake, Liverpool Street XR is double ended and the western end connects with Moorgate, which is on the Northern Line 🙂

    • Skywalker says:

      It’s not shown as being on the Northern Line, it’s showing it as a connection to the Northern Line (Moorgate).

      • Rob says:

        The Elizabeth line map is deliberately wrong for simplicity. It is actually a combined station at Liverpool Street and Moorgate, because the trains are so long (and the stations so close) that the front of it exits at one station and the other end at the other.

  • King of Sutton says:

    If you were travelling from somewhere up north and arrived at Euston… You then have to get a tube to Tottenham Court Road and then get on the Elizabeth Line to Heathrow? Is that the best way of doing it? Or do you have to get off again and wait for one that goes all the way through?

    • Nate1309 says:

      Euston Square connects to the circle/Hammersmith line then switch at Paddington

    • ChrisBCN says:

      Wait for HS2 then change at Old Oak Common.

      Or more helpfully, yes northern line to TCR. Take the first Heathrow train and, if necessary, change at T2/3 if its going to the wrong terminal (you could wait at TCR for the right terminal, but most of the time you’ll save a few minutes if you change at T2/3 – although if you don’t want the hassle of the extra (easy) change, you can wait.

      • King of Sutton says:

        Nice one. Cheers Chris.

        A bit of a faff to get to LHR from Euston but not too bad.

        • Andy S says:

          Get the Northern Line (Charing Cross btanch). If you get in the front carriage it’s closest to the exit for the Elizabeth Line. Really easy connection at Tottenham Court Road Station.

    • MJT says:

      Its actually very easy to connect to Tottenham Court Road, I have done this a few times now.
      Getting the Northern Line (Charing Cross Branch) is only one escalator down at Euston(although a few steps as well so if a lot of luggage not ideal), so very quick to get to the platform. Then the connection at Tottenham Court Road Northern Line to Elizabeth Line is really easy. If you want the lift, walk to the far end of the platform and you get off the train, 20 second walk, in the lift up 1 level and then 30 second walk and you are at the platform for the Elizabeth Line. Much quicker than the walk to Euston Square and then the Circle/Hammersmith Line which is a pain, and if you are heading to Heathrow no need to change!

  • Alex G says:

    How ridiculous that with all the investment on tube and train tunnels at Heathrow in recent years, its still a nightmare transferring between terminals. Would have been far better to develop one Heathrow Central station with a light transit railway linking all the terminals. Actually, make that two; be landside and one airside.

    Or a tunnel linking T4 and T5.

    • yorkieflyer says:

      Good grief, please don’t make sensible suggestions and give folk the idea that we could learn from those abroad chaps

      • Richie says:

        I remember visiting Chek Lap Kok in early 2001 and being amazed.

        • Alex G says:

          And the HK Metro provides a free shuttle to many hotels, which we found brilliant as first time visitors. A proper integrated transport system.

    • Track says:

      Not going to happen — have to re-build entire airport for that light transit and Heathrow is already congested overland.

      They should treat T5 with its satellites as its own travel hub, and 1-per-hour Elizabeth line train not cutting it.

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.