Coventry To Leicester In A Flash? New Rail Plans Promise Faster, Greener Travel!
The title of this post, is the same as this article on Rail Technology Magazine.
This is the sub-heading.
Passengers travelling between Coventry, Leicester and Nottingham have outlined their support for proposed upgrades to reconnect the cities by direct rail for the first time in over two decades.
These first two paragraphs add some detail.
Despite being located just 23 miles apart, travelling between the cities requires passengers to change trains in Nuneaton, with wait times for the connection often exceeding 30 minutes. As a result, just 3% of trips between Coventry and Leicester are made by train; compared to 30% of journeys made between Coventry and Birmingham.
Midlands Connect recently visited Nuneaton railway station to speak with passengers travelling between the cities, waiting for their onward connection, about the proposed upgrades and how they would be impacted.
This OpenRailwayMap shows the route between Coventry and Leicester.
Note.
- Coventry is in the South-West corner of the map.
- Leicester is in the North-East corner of the map.
- Nuneaton, where you currently have to change trains,is marked by a blue arrow.
- The red track passing through Nuneaton station, is the Trent Valley Line.
Services between Coventry, Leicester and Nuneaton are run by two companies.
- CrossCountry run a half-hourly service between between Birmingham New Street and Leicester via Nuneaton.
- West Midlands Trains run an hourly service between Leamington Spa and Nuneaton via Coventry.
I feel ideally, that Leicester and Coventry need a half-hourly service, but an hourly service would be easy and a half-hourly service would mean a four-trains per hour (tph) service between Leicester and Nuneaton.
Probably, the easiest service would be to extend the hourly Leamington Spa and Nuneaton to Leicester, with a reverse at Nuneaton.
What Does The Article Mean By Greener Trains?
I would expect the article means battery-electric trains, but the only mention is in the title.
Could Leicester And Coventry Be Served By Battery-Electric Trains?
This OpenRailwayMap shows the track layout at Nuneaton station.
And this OpenRailwayMap shows the track layout at Coventry station.
As electrified tracks are shown in red, it would appear that all tracks at both stations are electrified.
The platforms at Coventry and Nuneaton, may be good enough for a quick Splash and Dash, but trains don’t spend long enough in the stations for a full charge.
- Perhaps the solution is to install one of Siemens’s Rail Charging Converters in Leamington Spa and Leicester stations.
- The distance between Leamington Spa and Leicester stations is 48.3 miles, which is well within the range of a battery-electric train.
- Leamington Spa and Nuneaton takes 38 minutes.
- Leicester and Nuneaton takes 27 minutes.
I feel an efficient hourly service could be created between Leicester and Leamington Spa using battery-electric trains.
Onward To Nottingham
Nottingham is another 27.5 miles from Leicester and currently takes 48 minutes in a Class 170 train.
Connections To The North-West And Scotland At Coventry And Nuneaton
They are good and could be more numerous and better.
Could Hydrogen-Powered Trains Be Used?
Yes! If a UK hydrogen-powered train existed!
Cost Of The Project
As reasonably modern trains happily use the route between Leamington Spa and Leicester every day, I suspect that little needs to be done on the full route to create a new service.
So the cost of the project would be sufficient new battery-electric trains and the ability to charge them at Leamington Spa and Leicester.
Conclusion
I believe that Coventry and Leicester would be an easy route to run using an hourly battery-electric train.
It could be extended to Leamington Spa at one end and Nottingham at the other.



Midlands Connect’s current business case is at https://www.midlandsconnect.uk/media/jsue13r5/mc-publications-design-breaking-down-barriers-v3.pdf This includes reinstating the dive-under SE of Nuneaton, which is shown on OpenRailwayMap. This could be used by freight, and also direct through passenger trains. AIUI, this would mean they wouldn’t stop (or reverse) at Nuneaton. Subject of course to further study – and funding.
Comment by Peter Robins | August 27, 2025 |
There have been quotes from senior people in Avanti, that they feel Nuneaton is a good place to pick up business going East-West.
To do that they’d really need a platform on the dive-under.
Comment by AnonW | August 27, 2025 |
A couple of the Euston-Chester trains stop at Nuneaton (most only stop at Crewe and Stafford), and I’ve used that quite a few times coming from Leicester and beyond. The dive-under is though some 500m from the station, so quite a hike, particularly for people with luggage. No doubt they’ll look into this in their further studies.
Comment by Peter Robins | August 27, 2025 |
I used to live near Newmarket and travelling to say Liverpool was a pain.
The TransPenine Route and Oxford and Cambridge are being fixed, but do we need a Lincoln to Coventry route?
You also can’t get a direct train between Leicester station and Birmingham International for the Airport or HS2.
P
Comment by AnonW | August 27, 2025
Lincoln-Coventry wouldn’t be a problem if the demand is there, as you could simply extend to/from Nottingham. Improving Lincoln-Nott is one of Midland Connect’s priorities https://www.midlandsconnect.uk/media/yynlzcav/midlands-connect-summary-document.pdf pp6-7. They don’t seem to have given much thought to improving connections to Brum airport. They plan to beef up Nuneaton-Coventry, but I don’t think you could build a westbound chord at the Coventry end, as that’s all built up.
Comment by Peter Robins | August 27, 2025
There is mention of an old diveunder.
So from Coventry, travel into Nuneaton (as at present), then reverse out and down through the diveunder – will probably need a tight radius curve.
This continues to use the existing Nuneaton station and avoid crossing all the WCML lines.
Comment by chilterntrev | September 10, 2025 |
Well, maybe, but they’re talking of cutting up to 50 minutes off the journey time Coventry-Nottingham, and I don’t think you can do that if you’re reversing at Nuneaton. AIUI, there would still be direct Nuneaton-Coventry-Leamington trains. But we’ll know more when they publish more detailed proposals. The dive-under btw is shown on https://www.openrailwaymap.org/?style=standard&lat=52.524178861980566&lon=-1.456739902496338&zoom=16
Comment by Peter Robins | September 10, 2025 |