Avanti West Coast passengers face severe disruption as rail strikes resume

February 02, 2025
Avanti west coast

As Avanti West Coast train employees continue their strike action, which might affect every weekend until June, rail customers will experience significant disruptions on Sunday. 

The scheduled engineering work by Network Rail will exacerbate the strikes, which were halted for two weeks to allow for "intensive talks" between unions and the intercity rail operator.

Due to the stoppage by rail manager members of the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), services on Britain's largest intercity line will be reduced to one train per hour between London Euston and each of Birmingham, Manchester, and Preston, with a limited service extending to Glasgow. 

There will be no Avanti West Coast services in North Wales, Blackpool, or Edinburgh due to the drastically shortened schedule, and the trains that do run will only run for a limited amount of time. The first train will leave Euston just before 9am, and the last one will leave the station at around 5pm.

Planned engineering work in the Crewe area will mean some services are diverted, and there will be no direct Avanti West Coast trains between London and Liverpool. There will be an hourly shuttle service between Liverpool and Crewe.

Kathryn O’Brien, the customer experience director at Avanti West Coast, said: “With strike action, as well as engineering work in the Crewe area, impacting our services this Sunday, we are advising customers to check before they travel.

“We’re disappointed that the strike action is ongoing, and will impact our customers who may be working, visiting family and friends, or enjoying days out.”

The RMT had called off the strikes in the hope of making “meaningful progress” in a long-running dispute about rest day working.

If no resolution can be found, RMT members plan to continue Sunday strikes until the end of May.

“We remain ready and available at any time for talks to make progress on settling this rest day working dispute,” said a spokesperson for the RMT.

Passengers with tickets already booked for Sunday can use them to travel on alternative dates between Saturday and Tuesday or claim a refund.

People using the east coast mainline are also being advised to check before they travel because of planned engineering work. Services from London King’s Cross station will not run on Sunday as improvements are made to the track, drainage and overhead power lines.