is the
busiest railway station in London and the UK, with nearly 100million entries and exits from the station every year. London is the focal point of the British railway network, with
18 major stations providing a combination of suburban, intercity, airport and international services; the stations are a mix of termini and through stations. Most areas of the city not served by the Underground or DLR are served by suburban
heavy rail services into one of these stations. These suburban rail services are not part of Transport for London (apart from
London Overground and
Elizabeth line) but are owned and operated by a number of private rail firms and use TfL's
Oyster card system. The terminal (only) stations are
Cannon Street,
Charing Cross,
Euston,
Fenchurch Street,
King's Cross,
Liverpool Street,
Marylebone,
Moorgate,
Paddington,
Victoria and
Waterloo. Paddington and Liverpool Street do have Elizabeth line services going through them. The through stations are
Waterloo East,
City Thameslink,
Old Street, and
Vauxhall. The 'mixed' stations are
St Pancras,
Blackfriars and
London Bridge. London is also linked by rail to mainland
Europe by
High Speed 1 (HS1) through the
Channel Tunnel Rail Link. High-speed
Eurostar trains serve
Paris,
Brussels and Amsterdam central station. Eurostar's London terminus is at St Pancras International and the HS1 route passes through
Stratford International and two stations in the county of
Kent,
Ashford International and
Ebbsfleet International.
Suburban and regional London is the centre of an extensive radial commuter railway network which, along with Paris, is the busiest and largest in Europe, comprising
368 railway stations in the
London fare zones, serving Greater London and the surrounding
metropolitan area. Each terminus is associated with commuter services from a particular segment of this area. The majority of commuters to central London (about 80% of 1.1 million) arrive by either the Underground (400,000 daily) or by surface railway into these termini (860,000 daily). For historical reasons, London's commuter rail network is arranged in a radial form, and as a result the majority of services entering London terminate at one of the terminal stations around the edge of the city centre. Two long-distance National Rail lines currently go across London: the
Thameslink route runs between the more distant towns of in the north and on the south coast, passing through the City of London north-south, London suburbs as well as
Luton Airport Parkway and , while the
Elizabeth line passes through the city eastwest and is operated by
MTR Elizabeth line running between in the west and in the east. A major expansion of the Thameslink route is planned 2013–18, in which a number of existing regional rail services will be redirected via the cross-London Thameslink corridor. Constantly increasing pressure on the commuter rail systems and on the Underground to disperse passengers from the busy terminals led to the multibillion-pound
Crossrail project to develop the Elizabeth line. When it opened in May 2022, the Elizabeth line added further cross-London line passing through Paddington and Liverpool Street. New or upgraded stations have been provided at key city centre locations, linking to the Underground. While most stations in central London are termini, there are a few notable exceptions. London Bridge station has several through lines to the more central termini at Cannon Street and Charing Cross, and trains to the latter also call at
Waterloo East, linked to
Waterloo by a footbridge. London Bridge's through platforms are also used by the Thameslink services of
Govia Thameslink Railway, which cross the city centre, calling at Blackfriars, City Thameslink,
Farringdon and St Pancras.
London Overground running a
Mildmay line service on the
North London line. This forms part of London's orbital route. In addition to London's radial lines and cross-London routes, there are also several orbital National Rail lines connecting peripheral inner-London suburbs. These lines have been under the management of TfL since November 2007 and are operated by private contract under the
London Overground brand. This commuter transport is operated as a rapid transit system with high-frequency services around a circular route with radial branch lines and is designed to reduce use of the inner-city Tube network by allowing commuters to travel across London without going through the central Zone 1. London Overground was formed by joining a series of existing railway lines to form a circular route around the city. It incorporates the oldest part of the Underground's history, the
Thames Tunnel under the
River Thames, which was completed in 1843 and is now part of the
East London line, on which parts of the
Windrush line service are run. The services operated by London Overground are: • The
Mildmay line, which starts from
Stratford and goes across
North London before branching off in two directions via
Willesden Junction. One branches off to
Richmond in the west and the other branches off to to connect with the
Windrush line. • The
Windrush line, which uses a former London Underground line which was converted to heavy rail operation in 2010. The service starts at
Highbury and Islington and, sharing track with the
Mildmay line, runs through
East London before splitting at
Surrey Quays: to
Clapham Junction, where it connects with a terminus of the
Mildmay line; to
New Cross; and to
Sydenham, where there is a further split to
Crystal Palace and to
West Croydon. • The
Suffragette line, which links inner North London to the northeastern suburbs, and runs from
Gospel Oak to
Barking. It was extended to
Barking Riverside in 2022. • The inner-suburban
Lioness line from
Euston to . •
Weaver line services from
Liverpool Street to
Chingford,
Enfield Town and
Cheshunt via
Hackney Downs. • The
Liberty line, which runs from
Romford to
Upminster via
Emerson Park.
Airport services Heathrow,
Gatwick and
Stansted airports are served by dedicated train services, and are also served by standard commuter services. The
Heathrow Express service from Paddington is provided by the airport operator,
Heathrow Airport Holdings, whilst the
Gatwick Express from Victoria and
Stansted Express from Liverpool Street are provided by franchised train operating companies.
Operators train on a cross-London route at
Blackfriars station in central London Unlike the Underground, which is a single system owned and operated by Transport for London, National Rail lines in and around London are run by a number of separate
train operating companies (TOCs) under contract with the Department for Transport. This results from the
privatisation of British Rail in the 1990s which split the former state railway operator
British Rail into a number of smaller franchises in order to increase competition and allow railways to operate in a
free market. This structure has now been abandoned in favour of operating contracts, for which the commercial risk is taken by the government. The former franchises were abolished in September 2020. Among the firms operating passenger services in London, some are owned by foreign companies or by
state-owned railways of other European countries. London Overground is operated by a private company under contract to Transport for London, as is Docklands Light Railway. Heathrow Express is not part of the National Rail contract system, being an
open-access operator instead. is one of London's main domestic and international transport hubs providing both commuter rail and high-speed rail services across England.
National InterCity Long-distance
intercity services are provided at some London rail termini. Because the termini and intercity routes were largely built by competing companies, many termini serve cities in overlapping regions or different parts of the same region: •
London Euston for the
West Midlands,
Wales,
North West England and
Scotland •
London King's Cross for the East Midlands,
Yorkshire and the Humber, North East England and Scotland •
London Paddington for
South West England, the West Midlands and Wales •
London St Pancras for the
East Midlands, Yorkshire and the Humber and
Kent •
London Liverpool Street for
East of England •
London Waterloo for trains to the south coast and South West England. high speed trains at
St Pancras station International St Pancras provides international
Eurostar services via the
Channel Tunnel to cities including
Paris,
Brussels,
Lyon and
Marseille, with journeys to Paris in around 2hours 15minutes and to Brussels in around 1hour 50minutes. Journeys have also started to
Amsterdam. It is also possible to purchase combined train and ferry tickets on the
Dutchflyer service to the Netherlands as well as the
Irish Ferries service to the Republic of Ireland. ==Ticketing==