|
Africa
Middle East
Asia
America
Australasia
London
to China & Japan by
Trans-Siberian Railway
or silk route
London to India
overland
London to Australia
without flying
European
& overseas Railpasses
Explore Europe with
InterRail
Taking your car:
Motorail
Non-flying
Holidays by train
London to Paris by
Eurostar
The
end of the real Orient Express?
The luxury
Venice Simplon Orient Express
The scenic Swiss
Glacier Express
Auckland-Wellington on
The Overlander
NZ's most scenic train:
The TranzAlpine
Canada's Rockies on the
Rocky Mountaineer
Bridge over the
River Kwai
Buy train tickets & passes
online at the Seat 61
Rail Shop
Buy ferry tickets online at the
Seat 61
Ferry Shop
Comments?
Feedback? Need more help...?
Email the Man in Seat
Sixty-One..!
Sign the
guestbook
Important
note about the information on this site.
Webhosting by
Hostroute
Thank you
for visiting my site...
|
Britain to Ireland by train+ferry...
|
|
You can buy a
combined train+ferry ticket
from London
or any station in Britain to Dublin or any
station in Ireland...
It's a
well-kept secret... You can buy a combined train+ferry
ticket between any railway station in Britain and any railway
station in Ireland at amazingly cheap prices, via any of the
main ferry routes & ferry companies, one-way or return in
either direction. London-Dublin costs just £27 each way
via Holyhead,
London to Galway, Cork, Limerick or Sligo £43 each way.
Oxford, Canterbury, Brighton, Norwich or Cambridge to Dublin
costs £27 each way via Holyhead, and Leicester, Hereford, York, Plymouth or
Leeds to Dublin costs £25. That's the regular fixed
price with (virtually) unlimited availability, even if you buy
on the day of travel.
The train+ferry tickets cover train travel to Holyhead (or Stranraer or Fishguard,
you choose whichever route you want) plus the ferry to Ireland (Irish Ferries or Stena Line,
you choose which operator), plus the Irish Railways train onwards to your
chosen Irish destination. There are no airport hassles, no ugly motorways, just a
relaxing and scenic ride
through the British countryside by train and across the Irish Sea by
ferry. It's the traditional, civilised, time-honoured
way to reach Ireland, the way everyone travelled for most of
the 19th and 20th centuries. It's far more
eco-friendly than a short-haul flight, as flying is now the
fastest-growing contributor to global warming.
It's also a lot cheaper, especially given airline baggage fees,
airport taxes and the £13 train fare you'd have to pay
from central London out to the airport. On the trains &
ferries, children go for half fare and infants go free. Bring a bottle
of your favourite wine with you (try doing that on Ryanair),
sit back, relax and enjoy the journey. This page
explains train+ferry routes, timetables, fares and how to buy
tickets.
|
|
|
London or any station in Britain
to or from Dublin, with a cheap combined
train+ferry ticket...
London-Dublin £27 each way...
Manchester-Dublin £24 each way...
Brighton-Dublin £27 each way...
Oxford-Dublin £27 each way...
By traditional, eco-friendly train+ferry.
Any day, any time, unlimited availability...
|
|
On this page:
|
Suggested train+ferry service
from London to Dublin, Cork,
Limerick, Galway, Sligo, Belfast. Start here, as this section
suggests the most convenient daytime train+ferry connection between these
cities, with timetables, fares & an account of the journey.
It explains how to find train times & fares from other UK
towns & cities as well as London, and to find train times
& fares to other
Irish destinations as well as the ones shown.
London to Dublin by train+ferry, complete
timetable. If the suggested option doesn't suit you,
this section shows all the train &
ferry options between London & Dublin via both Irish Ferries
& Stena Line, with fares & how to buy tickets.
London to Rosslare & Waterford: Times, fares, how to
buy tickets for journeys via Fishguard-Rosslare.
London to Cork via Holyhead, Fishguard or Swansea.
London to all other destinations in Ireland
|
|
Also on this page...
Train travel within Ireland
Day trips from Dublin by train &
motorcoach
Short breaks to Ireland without flying
Read a review of rail+sea travel to Ireland at the Irish
Sunday Tribune.
|
Train & ferry route
map...
Sponsored links:
| |
 |
| |
Leave central London aboard
Virgin Trains' 9.00am 'Irish Mail' to Holyhead... |
| |
 |
| |
The train is modern and
air-conditioned... |
| |
 |
| |
...it
passes right by Conway
Castle... |
| |
 |
| |
...and crosses
the Menai Strait to Anglesey. |
| |
 |
| |
At Holyhead, you board Stena Line's
3pm HSS fast ferry to Dun Laoghaire... |
| |
 |
| |
...and relax on
board in the spacious bars &
lounges with a beer or a meal... |
| |
 |
| |
...The Welsh coast
disappears astern as the ferry
heads for Ireland... |
| |
 |
| |
At Dun Laoghaire, you hop on the
DART train right into Dublin city centre, arriving around
6pm... |
Let's keep things
simple, and start by suggesting the most convenient daytime train+ferry service between
London & Dublin, Cork, Limerick, Galway or Belfast, via the
cheapest & most direct route. If this timetable doesn't
suit you, if you'd rather travel time-effectively overnight or if you'd prefer
to use a conventional ship with Irish Ferries to Dublin
Ferryport rather than
Stena Line's HSS fast ferry to Dun Laoghaire, then by all means see the
London-Dublin
complete timetable section below, as all the other options
are shown there.
London ► Dublin,
Belfast, Sligo, Galway, Limerick, Cork
(suggested option)
-
Step 1: Travel from
London to Holyhead by train. On Mondays-Fridays,
a direct Virgin 'Pendolino' train leaves London Euston station
at 09:00 for Holyhead in north Wales, arriving at 13:03.
The train is modern and air-conditioned, with refreshments
available on board. On Saturdays, depart London
Euston at 08:03, change trains at Crewe, arriving Holyhead at
13:30. On Sundays there's no connection early enough for
this particular ferry, so see the
section below for
alternatives. Check train times for your date of travel using
www.nationalrail.co.uk as times can vary, especially at
weekends.
-
If you're travelling from any other
British town or
city to Dublin, simply use
www.nationalrail.co.uk to find train times to Holyhead,
to arrive at any time before 14:20. Use the route map above
to check that the route via Holyhead is a sensible one for
your starting point: For example, Glasgow to Belfast would be better via Stranraer,
Cardiff to Wexford is better via Fishguard! However, the
route via Holyhead is the best route from London, the
southeast, the south, East Anglia and the Midlands to Dublin
and most of Ireland, as it's the best-connected.
-
For the best
views between London & Holyhead, find a seat on the right-hand side of the
train. The train sweeps through the
Buckinghamshire & Northamptonshire countryside, with
frequent
glimpses of narrow boats on the Grand Union Canal alongside
the railway. A couple of hours out of London, the train calls at the railway town of Crewe (look out for the railway
museum on the right just after leaving) and later at the historic city
of Chester - look out for part of Chester's city walls on the right just
after leaving. The train then runs along the scenic
north Wales coastline, often just a stone's throw from the
sea. Look out for the old ferry 'The Duke of Lancaster',
originally moored as a floating nightclub and now just rusting gently. After
calling at Llandudno Junction, the train enters the pretty
town of Conway and passes right
alongside the towering walls of Conway's impressive castle. After
leaving Bangor, look through the trees on the right and you
can catch a glimpse of
Telford's suspension bridge
carrying the old London-Holyhead coach road (now the A5) from the mainland
onto the
Isle of Anglesey, and shortly afterwards your train crosses to Anglesey over
the equally historic
Britannia Bridge, built by Robert
Stephenson in 1850. Originally just a rail bridge, it was
rebuilt after a fire in 1970 and now carries a road above
the railway. As the train crosses the bridge, you'll see
Telford's suspension bridge a little way along the river to
your right. You're now on Anglesey, and your train
swishes non-stop through a little local station with the longest name in
Britain, a visitor attraction in its own right - it's
called Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch,
in case you were wondering! Finally, you'll see the mountains of
Snowdonia in the distance to your left before arriving in the
port of Holyhead, the traditional embarkation point for
Ireland.
-
In Holyhead, the
ferry terminal for both Stena Line and Irish Ferries is right
next to the station at the end of platform 2. So you
walk straight off the train and into the terminal to check in
for the ferry. After getting your boarding pass, there's a brief and painless X-ray
security check, and you then check in your bags so you
don't have to carry them round with you on the ferry.
Then you take the escalator or lift up to the departure lounge
and walk straight on to the Stena Line ferry when it's ready
for boarding. Irish Ferries also sail from Holyhead, but
Irish
Ferries passengers are taken out to the ferry on a free shuttle bus after checking in,
as their ships berth a little way from the terminal. This recommended option uses
Stena Line. There's a 30 minute check-in for all ferries,
so feel free to wander across the stainless-steel footbridge
into Holyhead's pleasant town centre (5 min walk from the station & ferry
terminal) if you've time to spare.
-
Step 2:
Sail from Holyhead to Dun Laoghaire by Stena Line fast
ferry, leaving Holyhead at 15:00 daily and arriving at Dun
Laoghaire at 16:59. Stena Line's HSS (High Speed Ship)
is a giant 20,000 ton twin-hull fast ferry, capable of 40
knots (about 46mph). It has bars, cafes, spacious lounges, a
restaurant, fast food outlets & a shop. The Stena Plus
lounge with complimentary tea and coffee is available for a
surcharge. There are two small caged-in viewing
platforms at the rear for some fresh sea air. You'll sea
the town of Holyhead give way to rocky Welsh coastline which then
disappears astern as the ferry speeds towards Ireland.
Less than 2 hours later you enter the wide Bay of Dublin and
approach the church spires and yacht-filled harbour of Dun
Laoghaire, with the dark purple Wicklow Hills in the distance
behind the town. This is the best way to see Ireland for
the first time, not the inside of an airport!
-
Step 3:
Take a train from Dun Laoghaire into Dublin city centre.
Retrieve your bags from the carousel and walk out of the ferry
terminal. The DART (Dublin Area Rapid Transit) railway
station is straight ahead of you, just across the road.
DART suburban trains to Dublin run every few minutes and the
journey takes 25 minutes. It's a short but remarkably
scenic trip, as the DART runs right along the sea wall, with
great views of Howth across Dublin Bay. Dublin Connolly
is the main Dublin station on this route, but feel free to
alight at Tara Street or Dublin Pearse if these are closer to
your hotel. You should be in central Dublin by around
18:10, after a painless and scenic trip from central London.
Three countries in one day, England, Wales & Ireland!
-
Step 4:
If you're going beyond Dublin, take an Irish intercity train to Belfast, Cork, Limerick, Galway:
For Belfast,
take the daily 19:00 'Enterprise' express from Dublin Connolly
arriving at Belfast Central at 21:10.
For Sligo,
take the daily 19:05 intercity train from Dublin Connolly,
arriving Sligo at 22:08.
If you're travelling
to Cork, Limerick, Galway, Waterford, Killarney or Tralee, you
need to transfer from Dublin Connolly station where
DART arrives to Dublin's Heuston station where the trains for
western & southern Ireland depart. The Dublin tram
(the LUAS,
www.luas.ie)
links these two stations every
5-10 minutes, the fare is 1.50 euros (not included in through
tickets) and it takes 15 minutes. Alternatively, bus 90
links Connolly & Heuston stations, and is included in through tickets.
You should
allow at least 40 minutes for interchange in Dublin between
stations by bus or tram.
For Cork, a train leaves Heuston station
daily at 19:00 arriving Cork at 21:55.
For Limerick,
a train leaves Heuston station on Mondays-Saturdays at 20:00,
change at Limerick Junction, arriving Limerick at 22:16.
On Sundays, leave Heuston at 19:10, change at Limerick
Junction and arrive Limerick at 21:26.
For Galway, a
train leaves Heuston station on Mondays-Saturdays at 19:15
arriving Galway at 21:55. On Sundays, leave Heuston at
18:50 arriving Galway at 21:34.
For any other
destination in Ireland, simply use the journey
planner at
www.irishrail.ie to check train times from Dublin.
Make sure you allow enough time to interchange in Dublin.
If it's not possible to complete your journey the same day
(for example, the last train to Tralee leaves Dublin before
you get there), you can stay in Dublin overnight and take a
train next day.
Dublin, Belfast,
Sligo, Galway, Limerick, Cork ► London
(suggested option)
From Belfast,
leave Belfast
Central on Mondays-Saturdays at 06:50 arriving at Dublin's
Connolly station at 09:05. There's no connection from
Belfast on Sundays, so travel the night before.
From Sligo,
take the 05:45 on Mondays-Fridays arriving 08:47. No
same-day connection is possible at weekends.
From
Cork, leave Cork on Mondays-Saturdays at 06:30 arriving in
Dublin's Heuston station at 09:15. There's no connection
from Cork on Sundays, so travel the night before.
From
Limerick, leave Limerick on Mondays-Saturdays at 06:35
arriving in Dublin's Heuston station at 09:05. No
connection from Limerick on Sundays, travel the night before.
From Galway,
leave Galway on Mondays-Saturdays at 07:15 arriving in
Dublin's Heuston station at 09:45. No connection from
Galway on Sundays, travel the night before.
From any other
Irish town or city, use the journey planner at
www.irishrail.ie to find suitable train times to Dublin.
Remember to allow enough time in Dublin to interchange, even
if the train arrives a bit late.
If your train arrives at Heuston station, take the LUAS tram to
Connolly station, this runs every 5-10 minutes and takes 15
minutes, fare 1.50 euros (not included in through tickets).
The tram leaves from right outside the front of the station.
Alternatively, take bus 90.
-
Step 1:
Travel from Dublin city centre to Dun Laoghaire by train,
leaving Dublin Connolly on a DART suburban train at 10:04 and arriving Dun Laoghaire at
10:28. DART trains to Dun Laoghaire normally leave from
platform 6, but occasionally platform 5. There are
alternative DART trains at 09:44 or 10:08. The train
will be shown on the DART departure screens as going to Bray.
Enjoy the scenic journey along the sea wall with great views
of Dublin Bay. In Dun Laoghaire, follow the 'way out'
signs up onto the footbridge, turn left and down the
escalators. The ferry terminal is just across the road
outside the station.
-
Step 2:
Sail from Dun Laoghaire to Holyhead by Stena Line HSS fast
ferry, leaving Dun Laoghaire ferry terminal at 11:30 and
arriving in Holyhead at 13:29. There's a 30 minute
check-in. Bars, cafes, spacious lounges, a restaurant,
fast food outlets and a shop are available on board. On
arrival at Holyhead you walk straight off the ferry into the
ferry terminal and directly onto the railway station.
-
Step 3:
Travel from Holyhead to London by train. On Mondays
to Saturdays a direct Virgin Trains 'Pendolino' leaves
Holyhead at 14:14 arriving London Euston station at 18:20.
On Sundays, a direct train leaves Holyhead at 15:50 arriving
London Euston at 20:25. Train times can vary at weekends
due to engineering work, so always check them for your date of
travel using
www.nationalrail.co.uk. It's a scenic trip along the
north Wales coast, see the London-Dublin section above for an
account of this journey.
-
If you're travelling to
any other
UK town or city, use
www.nationalrail.co.uk to find train times leaving
Holyhead any time after 14:10.
| |
Buy a ticket to Dublin online...
London or
any railway station in Britain to or from
Dublin, with a cheap
combined train+ferry ticket...
London to
Dublin from £27 each way...
Norwich to
Dublin from £27 each way...
Oxford to
Dublin from £27 each way...
Manchester to
Dublin from £24 each way...
Canterbury to
Dublin from £27 each way...
Just enter
'London' or your local station and then either:
'Dun
Laoghaire' for Dublin via Stena Line or
'Dublin
Ferryport' for Dublin via Irish Ferries.
A small
(£1.50-£2.61) booking fee applies. As yet
this system
can't book tickets beyond Dun Laoghaire
or Dublin
Ferryport. Tickets can be sent to any UK
address or
collected at main British stations (useful for
travel
at short notice or if booking from outside the UK).
Tickets cannot
be collected in Ireland.
Note:
Don't worry that this system books you on the 09:46
from London
with 2 changes, just book this, but travel on
the direct
09:00 to Holyhead, the ticket is valid on any train.
This system
can book you via both the Ulysses and the
Swift to
Dublin Ferryport (Irish Ferries) and the HSS to Dun
Laoghaire
(Stena Line) but it won't say which ferry is which.
If the
Holyhead-Dublin crossing takes 3+ hours, it's the
Ulysses, if
it takes 2 hours it's the
Swift, if it goes to Dun
Laoghaire
rather than Dublin Ferryport it's the HSS!
CO2
offsetting: RailEasy will offset the CO2
emissions
from each
train journey they sell via UK offsetting
agency The
Carbon Company.
More information |
Fares...
-
London to Dun
Laoghaire costs £27 each way, children under 16 £13.50,
children under 5 free. These fares don't change, they are what you pay even on the day of travel. A
£2 higher fare may apply at certain peak times. Bought
in Dublin, Dublin to London costs 44 euros.
-
London to Dublin
city centre (including DART) costs £28 each way, children
under 16 £14, children under 5 free.
-
London to Cork,
Limerick, Galway, Tralee, Killarney costs £43 each way,
children under 16 £21.50, children under 5 free.
-
London to Belfast
costs £36.20 each way, children under 16 £18.10, children
under 5 free.
-
The fare from any
railway station in Britain is the same as the fare from
London, and in some cases a pound or two less.
-
You can check the
train+ferry fare between any British station and any Irish
station at
www.sailrail.co.uk (select 'via Holyhead-Dun Laoghaire'
to see fares via this ferry route).
-
Stop-overs are not allowed in either direction, you must
complete your journey to Ireland in one go.
As they are so cheap anyway, there's no additional discount
for young person's or senior railcard holders.
How to buy
tickets...
-
In person:
You can buy these tickets at most British railway stations,
even on the day of travel. But allow plenty of time to
buy your ticket, and be aware that staff at smaller stations
may not be very familiar with issuing tickets to Ireland.
It's better to buy tickets a day or two before if you can. To buy tickets via
this route, ask for tickets via 'Stena Line HSS Holyhead-Dun
Laoghaire'.
-
Online:
You can buy tickets online from any station in Britain to Dun
Laoghaire using the Raileasy booking form on the right. A small
booking fee (£1.50-£2.61) is charged. You can then pay
for the DART into Dublin city centre separately, when you get to Dun
Laoghaire, it's 2.50 euros each way. At present, RailEasy
will only book as far as Dun Laoghaire (or if travelling by
Irish Ferries, Dublin Ferryport), it won't book to other Irish
destinations. Tickets can be sent to any UK address or
can be collected from the self-service machines at all major
British stations including London Euston, useful if you're
booking from outside the UK or travelling at short notice.
Note that tickets booked
with RailEasy cannot be collected in Ireland, even though it
can sell one-way inbound Dun Laoghaire-London tickets.
-
By phone: You can buy tickets by phone from the SailRail booking line,
08450 755 755 (UK callers only). Lines
are open 08:00-20:00 Mondays-Fridays, 0900-1700
Saturdays & Sundays. If
you're outside the UK, call Virgin Trains telesales on
+44 870 9080 107. To buy tickets via
this route, ask for tickets via 'Stena Line HSS Holyhead-Dun
Laoghaire'.
How to buy
tickets if you're in Ireland:
FAQ...
-
Can I stop
off on the way? No. These cheap and flexible
Britain-Ireland fares are actually cheaper than the normal
domestic fares between London and (for example) Chester or
Holyhead, so you cannot break your journey, only travel
straight through to or from Ireland. Though that
doesn't mean you can't wander round Holyhead town centre
whilst waiting for your ferry! Of course, if you
really want to stop off, nothing
stops you buying separate tickets, for example a normal
ticket (say) London-Chester, then a Chester-Ireland
train+ferry ticket, but this costs a lot more than a
London-Ireland through ticket.
-
Are there any
baggage limits or baggage fees? Do I check my bags in?
There are no baggage weight limits or baggage fees to worry
about.
You simply take your bags with you on the train, placing
them on the luggage racks above your head or at the end of
the coach. You check bags in at the ferry terminal so
you're free to use the ferry's facilities without being
encumbered with luggage, then you collect your bags again
from the carousel at the ferry terminal on the other side.
-
Can I take my
bike? Yes. Bicycles go for £5 each way on
both Irish Ferries & Stena Line, no reservation required,
you simply pay at the ferry terminal when you check in for
the ferry. Bikes are carried on trains to Holyhead,
but reservations are required and a small fee (£3-£5) is
payable per journey.
-
Can I take my
dog or other pet? No, neither Irish Ferries nor
Stena Line allow foot passengers to take dogs or pets
(except guide dogs).
|
|
|
Take a train to
Holyhead in North Wales, then choose one of three types of
ferry to Dublin. Stena Line's HSS (a giant twin-hull
fast ferry) sails from Holyhead to Dun Laoghaire, 11km south
of Dublin, from where frequent suburban trains run to Dublin
city centre. Irish Ferries operate both a luxurious
cruise ferry called the 'Ulysses' and a high-speed catamaran
called the 'Dublin Swift', both of which sail from Holyhead
to Dublin Ferryport, about 2 miles from Dublin city centre
by shuttle bus. Train+ferry tickets are routed via a
specific ferry operator, those routed via
Irish Ferries can be used on both the Ulysses and the Swift.
Which ferry
should you choose? They're all good, but the Stena
HSS offers a fast journey and the easiest transfers, as in
Holyhead you can walk from the train straight onto the
ferry, whereas Irish Ferries passengers must take a free
courtesy bus between the ferry terminal and their ferry
after checking in.
In Dun Laoghaire you can take a more comfortable train into
the city centre, whereas from Dublin Ferryport you need a
shuttle bus. The crossing to Dun Laoghaire is also (if such
things matter to you) the historic and traditional route to
Ireland. However, if travelling overnight, Irish
Ferries' Ulysses has private cabins (at extra cost, of
course) so you
can get some sleep & privacy, whereas the HSS only has
seating, no cabins. The HSS is almost entirely enclosed (it has two
small viewing decks at the rear, largely caged in), and you
may prefer the
leisurely 3 hour 15 minute voyage on the 50,000-ton
'Ulysses', the world's largest car ferry, with
cruise-liner-style lounges, bars, restaurant and cinemas,
and open decks where you can take in the sea air and watch
the coast of Ireland approach. Finally, the Dublin Swift offers
the fastest crossing and offers a wider range of departures,
but be aware that it can be cancelled in bad weather and
passengers transferred to the next available sailing of the
Ulysses.
 |
|
 |
OR |
 |
|
1. Irish Ferries
'Ulysses': A
luxurious cruise ferry to Dublin
Ferryport. The leisurely crossing takes 3 hours
15 minutes. Bars, restaurants, cinema, and
optional private cabins are available on board.
|
|
2. Irish Ferries
'Dublin Swift': A fast catamaran to Dublin Ferryport,
taking just 1 hour 49 minutes. Reclining seats & refreshments are available on board.
The Swift can be cancelled if the weather is bad, with
passengers transferred to the Ulysses. |
|
3. Stena
Line HSS (High Speed Sea Service, the world's
largest fast ferry) to Dun Laoghaire, for the DART
train to the city centre. Crossing 1 hour 59
minutes at up to 40 knots (46mph). Bars, lounges
and restaurants are available on board.
|
London ► Dublin
(via Irish Ferries):
|
| |
Mondays-Fridays |
Saturdays |
Sundays |
|
1. Train...
Change trains at: |
Crewe |
Direct |
Crewe |
Direct |
Crewe |
Crewe |
Crewe |
Crewe |
------ |
------ |
------ |
Crewe |
|
London Euston
depart by train: |
06:46 |
09:00 |
11:28 |
19:38 |
06:14 |
07:55 |
10:17 |
18:17 |
------ |
------ |
------ |
18:58 |
|
Holyhead arrive
by train: |
11:30 |
13:03 |
15:30 |
00:52 |
11:30 |
12:55 |
15:30 |
23:26 |
------ |
------ |
------ |
00:26 |
|
2. Ferry...
Ferry type: |
Swift |
Ulysses |
Swift |
Ulysses |
Swift |
Ulysses |
Swift |
Ulysses |
Swift |
Ulysses |
Swift |
Ulysses |
|
Holyhead
depart by ferry: |
12:00 |
14:10 |
17:15 |
02:40 |
12:00 |
14:10 |
17:15 |
02:40 |
12:00 |
14:10 |
17:15 |
02:40 |
|
Dublin Ferryport arrive
by ferry: |
13:49 |
17:25 |
19:15 |
05:55 |
13:49 |
17:25 |
19:15 |
05:55 |
13:49 |
17:25 |
19:04 |
05:55 |
London ►
Dublin (via Stena Line HSS):
|
| |
Mondays-Fridays |
Saturdays |
Sundays |
|
1.
Train... Change trains at: |
------ |
direct |
------ |
Crewe |
------ |
------ |
|
London Euston depart
by train: |
------ |
09:00 |
------ |
08:03 |
------ |
------ |
|
Holyhead arrive
by train: |
------ |
13:03 |
------ |
13:30 |
------ |
------ |
|
2. Ferry...
Ferry type: |
HSS |
HSS |
HSS |
HSS |
HSS |
HSS |
|
Holyhead depart
by ferry: |
08:55 |
15:00 |
08:55 |
15:00 |
08:55 |
15:00 |
|
Dun Laoghaire
(for Dublin) arrive
by ferry: |
10:54 |
16:59 |
10:54 |
16:59 |
| | |