Review: London’s Elizabeth Line vs Heathrow Express
London’s new Elizabeth Line offers a welcome alternative to the Heathrow Express.

London’s Heathrow Express no longer holds the monopoly on fast, efficient train travel between Heathrow Airport and the city.
The new Elizabeth Line is not only quick enough for most people, it’s also more affordable and gets you to more places in London without the hassle of changing trains at Paddington.
The Heathrow Express rockets between Heathrow – specially Terminals 2, 3 and 5 – and Paddington in around 15 minutes, and trains run every quarter-hour.
But Heathrow and Paddington are the only stops – so if you need to go further afield that Paddington, you’ll have to change trains (indeed, making your way from the HEX platform at Paddington’s regional line platforms down to the underground Tube platforms).
By comparison, The Elizabeth line – previously known as the Crossrail project – reaches across greater London.
Trains run from all four Heathrow terminals (using the Heathrow Express platforms and tunnels) east to six ‘core’ underground stations – including Paddington, Bond Street, Tottenham Court Road and Liverpool Street – and through to the Canary Wharf business district and beyond.
All these stations, and several others along the Elizabeth Line, also serve as interchange stations for eight popular Tube lines as well as the Overground and DLR lines and regional Network Rail services.
Clearly, the Elizabeth Line wins for convenience.
Under the current timetable there’s one Elizabeth Line train every 15 minutes to and from Heathrow Terminals 2 and 3, but only one every half-hour to Terminal 4 and Terminal 5 (you can browse the complete Elizabeth Line timetables at the Transport for London website).
With six stops between Heathrow and Paddington, that trip on the Elizabeth Line takes 30-40 minutes – so it’s clearly not as zippy as the Heathrow Express.
But it’s still relatively speedy, as well as being very comfortable in the new Elizabeth Line carriages, which sport a variety of seating from metro-style ‘transverse’ rows to more conventional forward/backwards seats – although as this is a commuter train rather than a dedicated airport train, there are no baggage areas.
And if you need to jump online during your ride, both the Heathrow Express and Elizabeth Line trains offer free WiFi.
So how do the fares compare?
The Elizabeth Line uses the same zone-based charges as Tube services, except when it comes to Heathrow Airport, which attracts a £7.20 surcharge for use of the airport’s rail tunnels and infrastructure.
That means a one-way trip between Heathrow and Paddington (or any other central Zone 1 station) will cost £12.70 – for which you can use your Oyster card or any tap-and-go card, along with Apple Pay and Google Pay on your smartphone.
That compares to £25 on the Heathrow Express, unless you buy a £37 return ticket (which cuts the one-way fare to £18.50) – although if you can book at least 90 days in advance, the one-way fare is slashed to an insanely low £5.50.
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
24 Jan 2018
Total posts 605
The Elizabeth Line train will still be faster than a cab, Uber or other similar service. That's a BIG tick from me!
04 Dec 2013
Total posts 151
Not to forget the Picadilly Line - which depending on where you're coming from is a long but very straightforward way to the airport.
22 May 2011
Total posts 85
Interesting how the 7.20 quid airport surcharge fee is more than the 5.50 quid early bird Heathrow express ticket!
06 Oct 2021
Total posts 1
It will be interesting to see how much it erodes the LCY market.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Jul 2020
Total posts 4
From a public transport only perspective Heathrow Express is only ever worth it if living / staying in Paddington, and you could walk from the station. If you then paid for the tube to go onwards you may as well have caught the Piccadilly Line from the start. With a £7.20 access charge for Elizabeth Line, I wonder if this will, in time, be imposed on Piccadilly Line users? Certainly hope not, we've enjoyed what is now just £1.90p single journey tube fares from LHR to our Zone 2 office for 27 years!
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
12 Jan 2017
Total posts 21
Living in South London, I'll still be utilising the Piccadilly Line to get to Heathrow. I did use the Elizabeth Line once when it opened, but unfortunately the time saving of about 5 mins doesn't justify the (SYD equivalent) airport surcharge.
If your travel is to Central London or Canary Wharf, then it is a vast improvement over the Heathrow Express or the old TfL rail service that the Elizabeth line replaces to Paddington. However, the convenience of LCY for continental locations and security lockout only 15 mins before your flight rather than 40 at Heathrow is still a winner.
26 Oct 2017
Total posts 15
The Piccadilly line, while cheap, has always involved a struggle with suitcases for me. There's very little space for luggage and if you arrive at Heathrow at peak commuter time, the Piccadilly journey is uncomfortable in the extreme.
24 Feb 2017
Total posts 4
I used the Elizabeth line early October and it was excellent, except due to the National Rail Strike (it was on that day) timings were all over the place. For value as my learned friend from Aust Cricket Tours stated, you can't beat the Piccadilly line, unless you have a marvelous Senior's Oyster card, and then the trip to LHR on Liz line was completely free! However you have to be a London resident to qualify for this. I am actually based in Oz, so don't tell TFL ...
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