Saturday 1st November 2025

Runcorn’s two stations have very different pedigrees and present quite a contrast. The town’s long standing main station, called Runcorn, opened way back in April 1869 whereas its youthful compatriot, Runcorn East, is a much more contemporary addition to the network, opening as recently as October 1983.

The town of Rucorn nestling in Halton between Merseyside, Warrington and Greater Manchester gained fame in 1964 when designated a New Town by the Government, leading to a projected doubling of population in subsequent years. Extensive new house building brought in residents from Liverpool, the wider area of Merseyside and further afield. The railway station was not particularly conveniently sited for the expansion with new development to the east of the old town, hence, in later years the opening of the town’s second station, Runcorn East, located on the eastern flank of the newly expanded town, as shown on the map below.

The original Runcorn station is located on the main line connecting London with Crewe and Liverpool and also sees trains head south to Wolverhampton and Birmingham as well as to Chester so enjoying the presence of Avanti West Coast, London Northwestern Railway and Transport for Wales respectively.

Avanti’s London Euston to Liverpool timetable isn’t quite yet fully up to two journeys per hour throughout the day as there are still some hourly gaps in the late morning and early afternoon but it’s better than it was and now sees seven coach Class 807 trains allocated to most journeys. The extra journeys in the timetable provide direct journeys from Runcorn to Lichfield and Tamworth (with trains running non stop through Crewe) with the more established journeys each hour calling at Crewe and Milton Keynes. More journeys are being added in next month’s timetable change giving much more consistency to the half hourly frequency.

London Northwestern Railway runs two trains an hour between Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Crewe and Liverpool now using its new Class 730 trains and…

….Transport for Wales operates hourly between Liverpool and Chester via the Frodsham curve using its newish Class 197 trains.

Runcorn therefore sees five trains an hour in total (most hours) in each direction with all northbound (or is it westbound) continuing to Liverpool.
Runcorn East is less busy, seeing just a daytime hourly service in each direction provided by Transport for Wales. It’s located on the line via Frodsham and Helsby to Chester with trains continuing to Llandudno or Holyhead. Warrington and Manchester (including the Airport) are served in the other direction and again passengers will travel in newish trains with more Class 197s.

Northern runs limited weekday journeys in the early morning (three) and evening (two or six depending on direction) between Chester and Manchester then on to Bradford and Leeds which call at Runcorn East but as you can see from the timetable below, none of the trains call during the daytime but pass by without stopping.

Taking both stations together Runcorn residents enjoy useful connections to Manchester, north Wales, the Midlands and south of England but neither station is particularly conveniently located for the town; both being on its extreme edges (west and east).

Runcorn is managed by Avanti West Coast with Runcorn East managed by Transport for Wales even though the station is very much in Cheshire. This leads to the unusual situation of TfW information being provided on posters in English only. Interestingly Bradford and Leeds don’t get a mention on the stations served poster either.

Runcorn saw 625,000 passengers entries and exits in 2023/24 while Runcorn East had about a quarter of that at 175,000.
As you can see from the earlier map, the distance between the two stations is the furthest we’ve come across yet in this series, at over five miles, with Google maps indicating it would be an 83 minute walk. A bus ride takes about 25 minutes or it’s about 15 minutes in a car or taxi.
Neither station is over brimming with passenger facilities.

Runcorn’s rather under stated building on the southbound platform is overshadowed by a huge multi-storey car park…

… and with no other covered waiting shelters on the rather narrow width southbound Platform 1…

… it’s just as well there are a number of seats provided inside…

…alongside the two ticket office windows…

… and two ticket machines…

… so passengers have somewhere to wait albeit it can get quite crowded as the London train departure time approaches.

There’s a small retail outlet which also serves coffee…

… and next door in an adjacent room there’s a public space for community meetings…

…which can also be rented out.

Toilets for passengers and staff facilities complete the building’s occupation.

Over on Platform 2 for Liverpool bound trains there’s a substantial waiting shelter…

… including a separate section for those needing assistance…

… and a much smaller basic shelter with no seats by the footbridge and lifts.

It’s quite a climb to cross over the footbridge…

… which seems to be higher than the norm…

… with four sets of eleven stairs.

Unusually there’s a separate line for freight trains which branches off just south of the station and passes alongside Platform 2…


… meaning the minor access for that platform from the west side of the station is always via the footbridge.

Outside the station building extensive work over the last few years has transformed the area with much improved ‘public realm’.

There are bus stops fairly close by but in the absence of maps it’s confusing trying to work out which routes go where. I gave up.

In the ticket office/waiting area there’s a fancy electronic sign showing up coming bus departures (shown on the right in the photo below – I bet not many people notice it) but you need to know the bus route you require for it to be of any use.

I gave the interactive lower panel…

… promising directions to other locations a try, particularly as I wanted to travel over to Runcorn East …

… but on pressing the icon the screen went blank.

Google maps told me an Arriva bus on route 79C would take me close to Runcorn East (as shown in the above display to Murdishaw) but despite waiting ten minutes after the due time it didn’t turn up so in the end I took a walk to the old High Street bus station and caught a 62 heading to Warrington which was on diversion to serve the main Shopping City bus departure points due to structural works on the Busway, but that’s another story.

I got there eventually and it’s a short walk from the Busway down a slope to Runcorn East station.

Which is where I met Phil on my visit yesterday morning. He runs the station’s small ticket office for five of its six day openings between 07:00 and 12:00.

As it was midday he was just closing up and recognised me from Geoff Marshall’s YouTube channel and he even kindly offered to give me a lift back to Runcorn station which he was passing by on his way home.

What a lovely man and I could see how the station was in good hands as I’d noticed on a previous visit a display of award winning plaques which didn’t surprise me having now met the man behind the station’s success.

There aren’t any facilities other than the ticket office which sits high above the railway tracks meaning many steps or a long slope down to reach the two platforms…

… also connected by both a railway owned footbridge…


… and a public footbridge…

… which connects the Busway over to the eastern side of the station…

… where there’s a recently expanded car park for passengers which is in council ownership and, very unusually, is free to use.

Each platform has a ‘bus’ style shelter including cycle stands…

… as well as a Ticket Machine.

And that’s about it for Runcorn East. But it’s all very quaint.

Back at Runcorn I bumped into blog reader John from Derby who it was nice to catch up with and my thanks to both John and Phil for their friendliness.

Roger French
Did you catch the 21 previous blogs in this series? 1: Hertford; 2: Canterbury. 3: Wigan, 4 Dorchester, 5 Windsor, 6 Wakefield, 7 Reddish, 8 Yeovil, 9 Newark-on-Trent, 10 New Mills, 11 Tyndrum, 12 St Albans, 13 Falkirk, 14 Catford, 15 Helensburgh, 16 Gainsborough, 17 Edenbridge, 18 Bicester, 19 Worcester, 20 Epsom and Ewell, 21 Wrexham.
Blogging timetable: 06:00 TThS

So Runcorn “nestles between Merseyside, Warrington and Greater Manchester “ but at least one of its stations is “very much in Cheshire”?
There are local council administrative areas, former local council administrative areas and real counties. Best stick to one or the other!
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Both statements are true. What’s the problem?
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Runcorn looks to be blessed with plenty of railways, but inconvenient stations and services. Runcorn East looks to be beautifully looked after. Well done Phil.
I wonder if there was ever a proposal to move the main station.
Shame about the extremely poor bus information. Why do so many bus companies assume that every potential passenger already knows which bus to catch? Journey planners on their own are just not enough (especially ones that fall over). A button on that screen to bring up a map would help enormously.
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Indeed….ironically, albeit now a couple of decades ago, you could always pick up a copy of the Halton Council area bus timetable at Runcorn station, even though few buses served the station itself. Then came the cost-cutting…..timetable sheets only in the Library….then nothing!
As stated so many times on this site, if ONLY area bus maps were produced (even Arriva was quite good at this at one time provided you dug around on their website), you could at least have a sporting chance. But as also said many times, there is a very large disconnect between those who plan and operate bus services and those who use them.
Terence Uden
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Runcorns have scope to expand services , if needed, with that Liverpool Network from Birkenhead running through and adding to serve Warrington and return via the more north line to Liverpool. Depends really if Runcorn can expand population sustainably – did it reach its potential housing numbers in original plan ? Similar to Skelmersdale , I know some is in Green Belt etc but the plans were there in the past.
JBC Prestatyn
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Probably better to catch the train from Runcorn to Runcorn East changing at Frodsham rather than rely on Arriva buses!
From May both Runcorn stations will have direct hourly services to the north Wales coast.
Liverpool-Runcorn-Llandudno
Manchester Airport-Runcorn East-Bangor
Kirk Jones
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Seems odd that if residents moved in from Merseyside to areas to the east then the station opened to serve them doesn’t have trains to Liverpool.
John
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Seems it would be possible , give the curves, I dont know what the original service pattern passing the site and at opening was. However new towns were designed to be independent and not rely on a “legacy” location, hence most did not get the connectivity one might expect nowadays – Telford, Washington, Harlow, Livingstone, Cwmbran as examples
JBC Prestatyn
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“Nestling” eh? Did you see it move? The stations appear to be very respectable, and have the level of facilities appropriate to the demand. Nice report.
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I know you have already covered Reddish and New Mills on the line from Manchester to Sheffield via Marple, but are you planning to cover Marple itself? It has 2 stations: Marple itself and Rose Hill Marple (terminus of a short spur and all that’s left of a former through route to Macclesfield)
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I’ve had so many suggestions for places to include that I’m thinking of extending the series into next year so thanks for raising Marple as a possible place to add.
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In that case please could you do Battersea Park and Queenstown Road or New Cross and New Cross Gate?
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So Runcorn East only has trains between 06.51 abd 07.47 during the week (and slightly later on s Saturday), yet the ticket office is open from 07.00 to midday? Bet there aren’t many visitors after 07.47.
MotCO
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I think you’ve misinterpreted something, the TfW services operate all day every hour.
Stu – West Midlands Bus Users
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I spent some time managing revenue protection at Runcorn East for TfW a few years ago. The station is well looked after, but suffers from being completely hidden from view by anybody not in the station. It can have a threatening atmosphere, particularly in the evenings. I see that WBQ still has no ticket barriers. My experience was that hundreds of journeys a day to WBQ and back were made without payment. Have things changed? The 175k journeys is a gross understatement.
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You have misread that. Those time are when Northern Rail call, TfW calls all day.
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Typo – town of Rucorn.
Assuming that only pairs of stations sharing a town name are of interest, just the following four would pass the claimed 25, so either missing or extending is necessary:
Paisley, Blackpool, Burscough and Warrington
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Is the Glasgow Underground counted ? so maybe the pairs are only National Rail stations on the list ? )Watford and Watford High Street are the only present pair at Watford ? )
Obviously if DLR/TRAM/London Underground are included there are a lot more double places . I was going to suggest Croydon – but it has Three with South Croydon – Note next weekend check ukmodelshops website but there is a free model railway and history display at the town hall areas with Croydon Central taking a pride of place.
When working at an international company in London one chap was moved to the Runcorn office , we joked he was going to Rangoon.
JBC Prestatyn
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Erm … if National Rail stations only meet the criteria, then Watford has three stations …. High Street; Junction and North. I would submit that these cover urban; halt and major Interchange types.
If we include the Met station, that’ll make four.
Acton, of course, had six stations …. North; East; South; West; Town and Central … but only one Is National Rail!!
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Acton actually has seven: North, South, East, West, Central, Town and Main Line. The last named now being served by the Elizabeth Line.
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Aarrgghh!!! I forgot Main Line!! Thanks ….
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And buses terminate at Acton Green or Acton Town Hall
JBC Prestatyn
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And the now officially closed Watford West
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surprised that Watford wasn’t being covered this week as one of the stations is 100 years old this week and had a little celebration.
(Thanks to diamondgeezer blog for that nugget, he would’t miss it as he grew up there, before moving to the eastern delights of bus stop M)
MilesT
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Blackpool 3 – North, South, Pleasure Beach
Paisley 3 – Canal, Gilmour St, St James
Warrington 3 – Bank Quay, Central, West
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The Platform 2 shelter at Runcorn is one of the modular buildings developed for the original West Coast Main Line electrification in the late 1950s, early 1960s. A lot were installed to replace life expired LNWR modular timber buildings, including at Mossley Hill a couple of stops further towards Liverpool. There used to be some in the West Midlands, but I don’t think there are many left now. That one seems to be in comparatively good condition.
Chris Jackson
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Towns to come?
Farnborough (Main and North)
Ash ( Ash, Ash Vale, also North Camp which is just within the boundary of Ash)
Maidstone – 3 – (East. West and Barracks)
Dorking – 3 – (Main, Deepdene and West)
Enfield – (Town, Chase)
Bromley (South, North)
Coatbridge (Central, Sunnyside)
Exeter (St Davids, Central, St Thomas, St James Park)
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If London Overground counts then New Cross and New Cross Gate should be included.
I’d argue Battersea Park and Queenstown Road should be in as they are closer than most of the stations so far covered
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Really interesting read, I have visited Runcorn East a few times and I really like the smallness of it and the surroundings too, compared to that of Runcorn which has a more mainline terminus feel to it with the trains to and from London & Birmingham New Street. I would be interested to see what your thoughts are on the likes of Merseyrail wanting to build a new station in Runcorn in the coming years?
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Runcorn community room is apparently available to “book out” on Saturdays and Sundays. What another stupid Americanism.
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