---
title: "Train Stations in Glasgow: Central vs Queen Street"
date: 2026-06-20
author: "Johan E. Johansson"
featured_image: "https://everyrail.com/wp-content/uploads/image_72ae5121a324c6f429b5418710594f63.jpeg"
categories:
  - name: "Destinations"
    url: "/destinations.md"
---

# Train Stations in Glasgow: Central vs Queen Street

Glasgow has two main train stations a few minutes apart, and the right one usually picks itself by destination. Glasgow Central is the station for trains to England and to south and west Scotland. Glasgow Queen Street is the station for Edinburgh, Stirling, the north, and the West Highland Line. A free inter-station bus loops between the two, and the walk takes about 15 minutes.

A handful of smaller inner-city stations on the cross-city lines are sometimes the better drop-off than either main terminus. The Glasgow Subway is useful for the west end and the southside, but it is not a fast way to switch between Central and Queen Street.

One date-sensitive note. As of June 2026, Glasgow Central is in phase-two reopening after the Union Street fire of March 2026. Platforms 1 to 15 are open. The Hope Street entrance is the working main entrance while Gordon Street and Union Street remain inside an exclusion zone.

## Glasgow’s two main train stations at a glance

If your booking page only shows “Glasgow”, open the train details before paying and check the station code. GLC is Glasgow Central. GLQ is Glasgow Queen Street. The wrong one is a 15 minute walk away.

StationBest forMain operatorsCross-city linkGlasgow Central (GLC)London Euston, Manchester, Liverpool, Carlisle, the Caledonian Sleeper to England, plus Ayrshire, Inverclyde, and South West ScotlandScotRail, Avanti West Coast, TransPennine Express, CrossCountry, Caledonian SleeperLow Level platforms 16 and 17, on the Argyle LineGlasgow Queen Street (GLQ)Edinburgh fast trains, Stirling, Perth, Dundee, Aberdeen, Inverness, the West Highland Line to Oban, Fort William, and MallaigScotRail, Caledonian Sleeper (Highland), Lumo (approved Glasgow extension)Low Level platforms 8 and 9, on the North Clyde LineThe rule of thumb. Anything heading south, west, or to England usually leaves from Central. Anything heading east to Edinburgh or north into the Highlands usually leaves from Queen Street. Confirm the station on the ticket every time.

## Glasgow Central: trains to England and south-west Scotland

Glasgow Central is the busiest station in Scotland and the default for long-distance trains south. It is also the right station for ScotRail services into Ayrshire, Inverclyde, the Cathcart Circle, Lanark, East Kilbride, and the Shotts Line to Edinburgh. The Argyle Line uses the two Low Level platforms downstairs.

Five operators run cross-border services from here. Avanti West Coast covers the West Coast Main Line to London Euston, with about one fast train per hour and additional services via Birmingham New Street. TransPennine Express runs to Manchester Airport, Liverpool Lime Street, and to Preston via Carlisle. CrossCountry runs a long-distance service to Plymouth via Edinburgh, York, Birmingham, and Bristol, with a Sunday Edinburgh service. The Lowland Caledonian Sleeper picks up here for the overnight to London Euston on most nights of the week.

Two things to know before you walk through the gateline. Long-distance Avanti and TransPennine services usually use lower-numbered platforms near the Gordon Street end, so the walk from the working Hope Street entrance is short. ScotRail westbound services tend to use platforms 12 to 15 at the far west end of the concourse, which is a real walk. Allow extra time. Platforms 16 and 17 are Low Level, downstairs, and feel like a separate station. If your train is on 16 or 17, go down.

What to check: the live platform display once you are inside, since platforming keeps changing during the staged reopening. Ticket barriers are in use.

## Glasgow Queen Street: trains to Edinburgh, Stirling, the north, and the West Highland Line

Queen Street is the station for fast Edinburgh trains via Falkirk High, with about two per hour from the high-level platforms. It is also where you board for Stirling, Perth, Dundee, Aberdeen, and Inverness on the Highland Main Line, and for the West Highland Line scenic services to Oban, Fort William, and Mallaig. If you are travelling to the Highlands by day, this is your station.

Most services at Queen Street are ScotRail. The Highland Caledonian Sleeper calls here as part of its Highlander route between Edinburgh, Glasgow, Inverness, Aberdeen, and Fort William. In July 2025 the Office of Rail and Road approved Lumo’s extension from Edinburgh Waverley to Glasgow Queen Street, with a planned daily service to London King’s Cross via Falkirk High, Edinburgh, and Newcastle. Check Lumo’s current timetable to confirm the live daily departure before booking.

Two short notes. There are two Edinburgh services, and they are not interchangeable. The fast one runs from the high-level platforms via Falkirk High. The slower one runs from Low Level platforms 8 or 9, via Airdrie and Bathgate, on the North Clyde Line. Pick the route that matches your ticket. The £120 million Edinburgh Glasgow Improvement Programme rebuild finished in October 2021, so the concourse is modern, with the main exit onto North Hanover Street at the back of George Square.

## How to switch between Central and Queen Street

The fastest way between the two is the free inter-station bus 398, branded “Glasgow Station Link.” It loops Central to Queen Street to Buchanan Bus Station and back to Central. The hop from Central to Queen Street takes about six minutes. The other way is around ten minutes because of the loop. Any valid rail ticket gets you on board.

A few specifics. From Central the pick-up is on Hope Street during phase-two reopening, because the Gordon Street canopy is inside the exclusion zone. From Queen Street the bay is near the George Square exit, by Anchor Lane. Look for the “Glasgow Station Link” branding. The route is run by West Coast Motors for ScotRail.

The walk is around 15 minutes through the city centre, much of it along Hope Street and then through George Square. The Glasgow Subway sounds like the obvious option, but it is not, because neither Central nor Queen Street has a Subway station directly inside. The nearest Subway station to both is Buchanan Street, which adds two short walks at either end. For a station-to-station hop, the bus or the walk usually wins.

What to check: ScotRail signage at the working Central entrance for the current bus 398 bay, since the pick-up point has moved during the Union Street works.

## Smaller central stations on the cross-city lines

Four inner-city stations on the cross-city lines are sometimes a better drop-off than either main terminus.

Argyle Street is one stop west of Central Low Level on the Argyle Line. It runs the same trains as Central Low Level and is closer to the Merchant City area and the streets near the River Clyde. High Street is one stop east of Queen Street Low Level on the North Clyde Line, and it is the closest station to Glasgow Cathedral and the Necropolis. Charing Cross is one stop west of Queen Street Low Level on the North Clyde Line, useful for the west end of Sauchiehall Street and nearby hotels. Exhibition Centre sits on both the Argyle Line and the North Clyde Line, south of the river, and is the station for the SEC, the OVO Hydro Arena, and the BBC Scotland building. Worth knowing for events.

What to check: where your hotel or venue is against the cross-city line stops before you book the final leg. Arriving at the right inner-city station can save a 20 minute walk later.

## Glasgow Subway and how it fits in

Glasgow’s Subway is a 15-station loop run by Strathclyde Partnership for Transport. It is useful for the west end (Hillhead, Kelvinhall, Kelvinbridge) and parts of the southside (Shields Road, Cessnock, Ibrox), with trains every few minutes during the working day. Tickets are separate from National Rail.

For National Rail connections, the Subway is rarely the fastest tool. Neither Central nor Queen Street has a Subway station directly inside. The closest are Buchanan Street (a short walk from both) and St Enoch (a short walk from Central). For a tight onward connection, use the bus 398 or walk.

What to check: the last Subway train, which is earlier than the last National Rail train, and which kind of ticket you need before tapping in.

## Trains to Glasgow’s airports

Glasgow has two airports and they have very different ground transport. Mix them up and the timing goes badly wrong.

Glasgow International (GLA), in Paisley, has no rail link. The closest National Rail station is Paisley Gilmour Street, with frequent ScotRail trains from Central. The walk to the terminal from Paisley Gilmour Street is about 10 to 15 minutes along a signed path. The faster door-to-door option for most travellers is the Glasgow Airport Express bus 500, which runs from Buchanan Bus Station, one block from Queen Street, with a stop at Central.

Glasgow Prestwick (PIK), about 30 miles south on the Ayrshire coast, has its own rail station at the terminal. Direct ScotRail trains from Glasgow Central via Paisley, Johnstone, and Kilwinning take around 45 to 55 minutes. Passengers travelling to or from Prestwick can usually claim a discount on the rail leg with proof of a flight booking; confirm the current rule with ScotRail before travel.

What to check: which airport your flight uses. GLA and PIK are not interchangeable.

## Tickets, fares, and rail passes at Glasgow stations

Cross-border trains run by Avanti West Coast, TransPennine Express, LNER, Lumo, and CrossCountry use dynamic Advance fares, which are usually much cheaper when booked ahead. Anytime fares are flexible and tend to be expensive. Off-Peak fares are a sensible middle ground for daytime travel. ScotRail intercity uses the same structure on its longer flows. The same paper or e-ticket is valid across operators on the same route.

A few things travellers regularly trip over. Network Railcard discounts do not apply to many ScotRail-only journeys, so an England-bought card may not save anything on a Glasgow to Inverness fare. ScotRail issues its own railcards, including the 16-25, Senior, Disabled Persons, and Two Together. Caledonian Sleeper berths and seats need a separate paid reservation, even with an Interrail or Eurail pass. The pass covers the travel day, but the bed has to be booked.

Both stations have ticket barriers. At Central, the ScotRail ticket office is on the main concourse, with a separate Avanti West Coast travel centre near the high-level platforms. At Queen Street, the ScotRail ticket office is on the main concourse off George Square. Ticket machines are at both. Either station will sell you a ticket for the other.

What to check: that your Advance ticket is for the exact booked train, and that any pass-holder reservation has been issued before you leave the booking page.

## What to know about Glasgow Central in 2026

On 8 March 2026 a fire broke out in a vape shop on Union Street, leading to a partial collapse of the adjoining building and forcing Glasgow Central into a staged reopening. From Wednesday 25 March 2026 the station moved into phase-two reopening, with platforms 1 to 15 open and most of the main concourse returned to passenger use. Gordon Street and Union Street entrances remain inside an exclusion zone for now. The Hope Street entrance is the working main entrance.

Other practical details for the phase-two period. The ScotRail ticket office, the customer lounge, the Avanti West Coast first class lounge, left luggage, and lost property are all available. The inter-station bus 398 picks up from Hope Street. Retail and food on the south side of the concourse are open. The taxi rank on Hope Street continues to operate. Step-free access remains category A (compliant step-free access to all platforms).

What to check on the day: the Network Rail Glasgow Central page for the current reopening phase, since the situation is still moving. This article was last fact-checked on 20 June 2026.