National Express and its franchisees operate a limited number of coach types, primarily standardising on the
Caetano Levante body on
Mercedes-Benz,
Scania and
Volvo chassis. The Levante was designed between 2003 and 2005 by Portuguese coachbuilder
Salvador Caetano and National Express exclusively for use on the network, equipped with a
wheelchair lift at the front entrance door, and could be built on either two or three
axles depending on chassis configuration. The most recent tri-axle Levante III was introduced onto the network in July 2018, with an updated version named the Levante IIIA introduced from late 2022. After having initially trialled a
Yutong TCe12 on airport service A9 during 2020, National Express is to introduce a
Yutong GTe14 tri-axle
battery electric coach on a four-week trial operating Stansted Airport services from March 2024. The company also purchased 25
Van Hool Altano TDX21 coaches for services 040 between London and Bristol, and the 540 between London and Manchester via
Milton Keynes. These are due to enter service in 2024. National Express also runs ten Caetano Boa Vista bodied
Scania K410 double decker coaches on its network, all of which are operated by
Edwards Coaches. The first six entered service with National Express mainly for use between London Victoria and Luton Airport in October 2016, with the additional four later purchased by Edwards Coaches during 2018. National Express had previously standardised on the double-deck variant of the
MCW Metroliner for 'Rapide' coach services in 1980s, however by January 2007, the double-decker coach fleet had been reduced to 12
Neoplan Skyliners, all of which were later withdrawn from National Express service following a speeding driver
overturning a Skyliner on an
M25 motorway sliproad, causing the deaths of three passengers. ==On-board services==