London to Portsmouth by train

How to take a train from London to Portsmouth and on to the Isle of Wight

There are two options for taking a train from London to Portsmouth, where transfers are available to the Isle of Wight and to cross-channel ferries.

1: South Western Railway operates the fastest route from London Waterloo station, which is served by the Bakerloo, Northern, Jubilee and Waterloo & City lines of the London Underground.
These trains terminate at Portsmouth Harbour station, which is conveniently located to the Historic Dockyard and also offers a direct link to the ferries which head for Ryde on the Isle Of Wight.
They also call at Portsmouth & Southsea station in the city centre.

  1. Southern Railway operates trains on a slower route which departs from Victoria station.
    The speed advantage of the trains from Waterloo is somewhat negated if Victoria station is more convenient to the starting point of your journey in central London.
    Victoria is also served by the Circle, District and Victoria lines of the Underground.
    These trains terminate at Portsmouth & Southsea station, which is served by bus links to the pier that the hovercraft service to the Isle Of Wight leaves from and to the cross-channel ferry terminal
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Routes

Option 1: departing from Waterloo station

Travel Information

Arriving in Portsmouth:

All of these express trains from London to Portsmouth call at two stations in the city, they arrive first at Portsmouth & Southsea station, which is in the central area.
So take care not to leave the train there if you’re travelling on to Portsmouth Harbour.

Connecting to the Isle Of Wight:

At Portsmouth Harbour very straightforward transfers are available on to the catamaran ferries to Ryde on the Isle Of Wight, which are operated by Wight Link.

The trains which depart from London Waterloo at 30mins passed the hour usually, always have an easily timed connection into a ferry – the ferries which depart Portsmouth at 15 mins passed the hour.
However, the trains which depart London at 00mins passed the hour don’t connect with ferries during the winter.

Then on arrival in Ryde, you can take Britain’s quirkiest train journey from Pier Head station on the Island Line to Brading, Sandown and Shanklin.
The Island Line uses trains which once travelled beneath London on its Underground Lines.

Depart Waterloo at 30 mins passed the hour and an end-to-end journey from London to Shanklin is scheduled to take 2hr 43 mins, but when the connections from the trains which depart at 00 mins passed the hour are available, the journey time is only 2hr 30mins.

Thanks to the easy connection at Portsmouth Harbour station, when travelling by train to Portsmouth, making the transfer so that you continue the journey by ferry, is always quicker than connecting in Portsmouth to the alternative hovercraft service – because its departure point is some distance from the station.

2 x trains per hour

Tickets

Book early and save: Yes

The cheaper 'Advance' tickets tend to be available from around 10-11 weeks ahead of the travel date, but tickets can be booked up to 12 weeks ahead.
So if you look up a journey more than 10-12 weeks ahead and can't see any 'Advance' tickets, it will mean that they haven't been released for sale yet - it won't be because they have sold out.

The two disadvantages of booking an 'Advance' ticket is that they can only be used on the specific departure you select when making a booking - and then if you don't take that train, because you change your travel plans or don't get to the station on time, they can't be refunded.

The big plus of booking an 'Advance' ticket is the price, they can be more £20 cheaper than booking last minute tickets at the station.

Where to book
Ticket Provider Approximate Cost
South Western Railway *

South Western Railway Guide

South Western Railways offers a wider range of tickets than are usually available for British train journeys.
They include:
Evening Out tickets for journeys of less than an hour's duration
Sundays Out tickets for journeys of less than an hour's duration
Super Off Peak tickets enables savings to be made at quieter times on journeys of more than an hour.
For return journeys, you can now travel back within 30 days so they can also save money when Day Return tickets are not an option.

South Western Railway has produced a summary of when these and other specific types of ticket can be used.

On this journey

Good to Know

Taking the alternative trains from Victoria station:

These trains from Waterloo offer the fastest service from the capital, but depending on the location of the starting point of your journey, the alternative trains which depart from London Victoria station can be worth considering.
Waterloo station is served by the Bakerloo, Jubilee Northern and Waterloo & City lines of the London Underground, while Victoria station is connected to the Circle, District and Victoria lines.

A friend who regularly travels to Portsmouth takes that alternative route because his local station is on the Victoria Line.
Those trains which depart from Victoria can also be cheaper.

The alternative route from Waterloo:

Thanks to its role as a naval base, Portsmouth was a prize worth targeting when rival companies were constructing Britain’s earliest railways in the 1850s.
Therefore since 1858 travellers have had a choice of taking one of three routes when travelling between London and Portsmouth.

However, one of these routes, the trains which travel via Winchester, are always best avoided.
They take a longer route from Waterloo station than these trains which travel via Guildford, so are 40 minutes slower and aren’t any cheaper.

Though take care when looking at the departure boards at Waterloo station, as those trains via Winchester can be the next trains to Portsmouth Harbour that will be leaving, but the subsequent departure, which will be one of these trains travelling via Guildford, will actually arrive in Portsmouth sooner.

Taking any train from London to Portsmouth is a tad unconventional due to a quirk of British railway history.

Due to its south coast location Portsmouth was served by the Southern Railway which conveyed most of its passengers to and from London on short-distance routes, operated by metro-style electric trains.
Then in the 1930s the decision was made to extend the metro-style track all the way to Portsmouth, despite the city being more 120 km from London.

Travellers couldn’t be expected to put up with metro-style commuter trains for a journey of that distance, so this route has always been served by comparatively unique trains, which despite running on metro-style railway tracks, have the characteristics of long-distance expresses.
These ‘Desiro’ trains aren’t the fastest trains in Britain, they don’t travel at more than 150 kmh, but they are amongst the more comfortable British trains, so a pleasant journey is more likely than not.

However, these fast express services between London Waterloo and Portsmouth are shared between two types of train – and it isn’t possible to work out which of these trains you will be travelling by until it’s time to board.
On some departures a different type of Desiro train can be used, but those trains are mainly used on shorter-distance commuter routes – and the slower stopping trains, which travel as far as Portsmouth and Southsea station (and are best avoided)
But despite being a tad less comfortable, travelling by those trains sometimes can’t be avoided, if you want to hop on the next train.

In scenic terms a train journey from London to Portsmouth is perfectly fine but unremarkable.
South of Guildford the railway takes a route through the rolling hills of Hampshire, which showcases the 'green and pleasant land'.

Option 2: departing from Victoria station

Travel Information

All trains also call at: Clapham Junction*

*the faster trains from Waterloo don't call at Clapham Junction

up to 1 x train per hour

The longer journey time applies on Sundays

Tickets

If travelling by train from London to Portsmouth at the cheapest possible price is a key criteria, then it can be worth looking up the journey on the National Rail web site, so that you can easily compare the prices on this route with the alternative route from Waterloo station.

Book early and save: Yes

The cheaper 'Advance' tickets tend to be available from around 10-11 weeks ahead of the travel date, but tickets can be booked up to 12 weeks ahead.
So if you look up a journey more than 10-12 weeks ahead and can't see any 'Advance' tickets, it will mean that they haven't been released for sale yet, it won't be because they have sold out.

The two disadvantages of booking an 'Advance' ticket is that they can only be used on the specific departure you select when making a booking; and then if you don't take that train, because you change your travel plans or don't get to the station on time, they can't be refunded.

The big plus of booking an 'Advance' ticket is the price, they can be more £20 cheaper than booking last minute tickets at the station.

Where to book
Ticket Provider Approximate Cost
Southern Railway *

Southern Railway Guide

Southern takes a different approach than the norm for the sale of Advance tickets, because it offers them at three flat rate prices for its longer distance journeys.
So when making a return journey by Southern it can be particularly worth comparing the prices of 2 x Advance tickets, which will only be valid for one direction travel, with the price of a return ticket.

National Rail *

National Rail Guide

In Great Britain each Train Operating Company provides its own booking service for journeys by its trains, but many of their websites also sell tickets for nationwide journeys, regardless of which company operates the trains on the routes you wish to travel by.

The National Rail website is plugged into all of the train operator's booking services, so when more than one of these companies offers tickets for a route, it in effect offers a price comparison service.
It isn't a ticket agent, so you will be connected to the website of your choice in order to make a booking.

On this journey

Good to Know

Despite being slower than the trains from Waterloo, depending on the location of the starting point of your journey, these trains from Victoria can be worth considering.
Victoria station is connected to the Circle, District and Victoria lines of the London Underground

A friend who regularly travels to Portsmouth takes this alternative route because his local station is on the Victoria Line.

These trains which depart from Victoria can also be cheaper.

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