Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Review: we try the new Luton Airport Express train and the DART airport link

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

This is our review of the new Luton Airport Express rail service and the DART rail-air link.

The UK’s latest train service, the Luton Airport Express, officially launched on Monday.

This was also the day that the DART light rail shuttle between Luton Airport Parkway rail station and the airport terminal launched 24/7 operations.

You can learn more about Luton Airport Express on its website here.

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

Luton Airport Express is operated by East Midlands Railway, which runs trains from London St Pancras towards Sheffield on the line which passes Luton Airport Parkway station.

The new Luton Airport Express runs every 30 minutes Monday to Saturday and operates non-stop to the airport. The quickest journey time from St Pancras to the airport, including the DART transfer, is 32 minutes, of which around 22 minutes is the National Rail portion. I did it in 31 minutes.

There are trains on Sundays but they are less frequent. There are also other stopping trains to Luton Airport Parkway, both on Thameslink and East Midlands Railway.

Fares are advertised as ‘from £10’. In reality they appear to be as low as £7.60 one way for an adult single. This is excellent value given that the standalone price for the DART is £4.90 each way. Railcard discounts apply.

I headed up to Luton to take a look. Booked the day before, one way fares in Standard Class started at £8.70, including the DART fare, if you were willing to commit to a specific train. The snag is that few people can commit to a specific train, especially when returning to London from the airport.

To maximise my flexibility, I booked an Off-Peak Day Return for £27.90, although obviously anyone flying and staying overnight somewhere would not qualify for one of these. A full open return is nearer £40.

You must book your ticket to Luton Airport (LUA station code) and NOT Luton Airport Parkway if you want the DART trip to be included.

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

As an East Midlands Railway service, the trains operate from the upper platforms at St Pancras (1-4).

What is confusing is that, despite the Luton Airport Express branding, these are actually trains to elsewhere – in my case, Corby in Northamptonshire. They just happen to run non-stop to Luton Airport Parkway.

This means a) the trains are not adapted to carry excessive amounts of luggage, b) on your return trip, you have a risk of deing delayed if the train gets stuck between the Midlands and Luton and c) trains into London are likely to be busy when they reach Luton Airport Parkway.

Whilst the train had ‘Luton Airport Express’ branding on the outside, this was not mentioned in any of the on-train announcements.

I had an open ticket with no reserved seating although I had indicated the 10.15 train when I booked. At 10am I got a text message saying that ‘a limited number of unreserved seats are available in Coach C’.

I have no idea what algorithm triggered this. The train was, at most, 10% full. There were just three of us in my carriage and I was able to take this photo:

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

…. without getting a single person in shot.

Seating in Standard is 3×2. There are no tables. Wi-fi was free, did not require registration and worked well – albeit in a train with virtually no passengers.

You can’t knock the speed. I departed at 10.15 and pulled into Luton Airport Parkway on schedule at 10.37, 22 minutes later.

Connecting to DART at Luton Airport Parkway

This is, I have to say, a VERY slick process and far more effective than I anticipated.

There are escalators on the platform at Luton Airport Parkway, as well as lifts. Once on the upper level, you walk across the tracks and through the ticket gates.

You then have a very short walk to the DART ticket gateline:

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

As long as you bought a rail ticket to Luton Airport and not Luton Airport Parkway, the same ticket will let you through to the DART platform.

It is a very similar set up to the intra-terminal train at London Gatwick, with trains operating from both sides of a central island.

The trains are not the height of luxury but then we are talking about a four minute ride. That said, padded seats would not have gone amiss.

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

Looking out of the front:

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

The final part of the trip to the airport is in a tunnel and you need to exit via two steep escalators or a lift. Here is the airport station:

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

The only downer is when you emerge from the DART and you realise that you still have to walk for a couple of minutes to reach the terminal. Whilst technically covered, the airport is on a hill and I had wind and rain coming at me from the side:

Review Luton Airport Express train and DART

Conclusion

This is a very slick operation, except for the need to walk from the DART station to the terminal.

The trip from St Pancras to the DART station in the airport took just 31 minutes. Apart from the walk from your Luton Airport Express carriage to the platform escalator at Luton Airport Parkway, the entire trip is covered (a good job, given the rain!).

The cost, of course, is an issue. At £27.90 for an off-peak open return, it is £16.90 more than a return tube trip from Central London to Heathrow. It’s just one of the extra costs that (for someone living in Central London) often ends up making a ‘low cost’ flight with Wizz Air or another Luton carrier into something that costs the same as a legacy carrier from Heathrow.

That said, the combination of the DART and the non-stop trains from St Pancras (you can also take Thameslink services from Central London to Luton Airport Parkway) does make it more likely that I will fly from Luton in the future – and that was the point of the building it.

Comments (76)

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

  • Richmod_Surrey says:

    “It’s just one of the extra costs that (for someone living in Central London) often ends up making a ‘low cost’ flight with Wizz Air or another Luton carrier into something that costs the same as a legacy carrier from Heathrow.”

    That’s why I don’t fly from Luton or Stansted. Time yo get there and cost of travel, doesn’t make sense to suffer on budget airline. And I don’t live in Central London.

    • Michael Jennings says:

      The reason I don’t fly into Stansted is that the immigration hall is an absolutely hideous, soul destroying experience, particularly in the peak late evening period. I will fly out of Stansted if need be – that’s not so bad and security is pretty efficient.

      • m says:

        😄that’s actually so true.
        However on the departure, I can’t stand the poor lightning. I want to be awake!

        • Londonsteve says:

          I haven’t been able to work out if the lights are dim or the reflectors just haven’t been cleaned in a decade. It does feel a bit like a dimmer switch was turned down 50% in the terminal.

      • Lady London says:

        Yes landing late Friday evening, and even worse, late Sunday evening, at Stansted is generally really unpleasant

    • Chris W says:

      The Stansted immigration hall on Sunday nights in summer after 8pm is a sea of humanity. Probably 1,000 people queued up at once.

  • Dominic says:

    It looks like they’ve moved some of the older (but still fairly recent) Abellio Greater Anglia trains to cover this service/maximised a purchase deal by covering both lines (both Abellio, so would make sense..)

  • SamG says:

    As part of the franchise they were signed up to refurbish these into a 2×2 seating arrangement and install luggage racks. With everything transferring to direct awards by the govt this seems to have been delayed for cost reasons and I believe potentially will just be a light refresh instead

    There are also issues with short formations and I imagine as you say that at peak times boarding at the airport (morning) and London (evening) may be a bit of a scrum!

  • Heathrow Flyer says:

    Currently in the ‘soft launch’ tickets on the Luton Rising website are £2.40 ea way vs £4.90 ea way if you use contactless at the gate line.

    I found this out when using the DART last weekend. I have to agree it was a complete game-changer not having to take the bus up the hill.

  • Thegasman says:

    It’s a shame EMR can’t include some services to/from Sheffield that stop at Parkway as that would make Luton a viable option for me (<2 hours from SHF to terminal) whereas currently it’s 3 hours via STP or 2 1/2 hours changing twice at Leicester & Kettering.

    • SammyJ says:

      Was just wondering if they did on reading that it’s the Sheffield line in use. That’s very disappointing.

  • lumma says:

    I can’t help thinking that the £4.90 cost is to make people buy paper tickets and not use contactless, as for my recent couple of flights from Luton it worked out cheaper even paying for the bus but £4.90 might swing it the other way – especially with a Network Railcard discount.

    • John says:

      Paper tickets cost the same and you don’t get railcard discounts for the DART portion (there may be a few mistakes in the system while they are starting out)

      • lumma says:

        Paper tickets are way more expensive if you’re travelling to anywhere else in London than one of the Thameslink station. Luton Airport to Whitechapel with a Railcard is £19.45. Parkway to Whitechapel contactless is £13.90 + £4.90, so is still slightly cheaper. Evening peak on contactless would cost more however

  • John says:

    I used it yesterday and it was very efficient. My only gripe is that the first gateline at Luton Parkway should be designated as a National Rail station exit (towards DART) with only the second gateline bearing DART branding. This is because passengers with a ticket for Luton Airport Parkway only cannot travel beyond the first gate, and passengers travelling contactless on Thameslink need to tap out at that point too. Tapping into DART is a separate purchase.

    Sadly that was where the efficiency ended : LTN passenger security screening relied on free labour and coordination among passengers to keep trays moving, and the Aspire Lounge was closed to Priority Pass until about 1pm. Once inside, it was a much diminished and miserable affair.

  • Julian says:

    I was on the very first DART train, or one of the first, at 4am on Monday. Was very pleasantly surprised by how seamless it was (apart from the windy and wet walk up to the airport). In terms of time frames, it beats Gatwick and Luton to/from Central London.

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.