---
title: "London to Alicante by Train: Route, Tickets and Travel Time"
date: 2025-06-12
author: "Johan E. Johansson"
featured_image: "https://everyrail.com/wp-content/uploads/alicante.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Routes"
    url: "/routes.md"
---

# London to Alicante by Train: Route, Tickets and Travel Time

There is no direct train from London to Alicante. The practical route uses three rail legs: Eurostar from London St Pancras International to Paris Gare du Nord, a direct TGV INOUI from Paris Gare de Lyon to Barcelona Sants, then a Renfe train from Barcelona Sants to Alicante/Alacant Terminal.

This is a long journey. Plan it as a one-night trip with an overnight stop in Paris or Barcelona. A same-day journey can appear on some dates, but it depends on early departures and the limited Paris to Barcelona timetable.

## Three Legs, Two Changes

London to Alicante by train requires two changes: Paris and Barcelona.

LegTrainFromToTypical journey timeLondon to ParisEurostarLondon St Pancras InternationalParis Gare du NordAbout 2 hours 16 minutes on the fastest servicesParis to BarcelonaTGV INOUIParis Gare de LyonBarcelona SantsAbout 6 hours 50 minutes on direct trainsBarcelona to AlicanteRenfe Euromed or IntercityBarcelona SantsAlicante/Alacant TerminalAround 5 hours 24 minutes on direct servicesThe most demanding part is not the trains themselves. It is the timing. You must cross Paris from Gare du Nord to Gare de Lyon, then connect with one of the limited direct trains to Barcelona.

For the least stressful version, travel to Paris or Barcelona on day one, sleep overnight, then continue to Alicante the next day.

## The Full Route Explained

The route runs through three major rail hubs: Paris, Barcelona, and Alicante.

Start at London St Pancras International. Take Eurostar to Paris Gare du Nord. Transfer across Paris to Gare de Lyon. Board the direct TGV INOUI to Barcelona Sants. At Barcelona Sants, change to a Renfe train for Alicante/Alacant Terminal.

This keeps the number of train legs low and uses the strongest high-speed connections available between the UK, France, and Spain.

### London to Paris by Eurostar

Eurostar is the only practical train link from London to Paris.

The fastest services are advertised at 2 hours 16 minutes. Trains leave from London St Pancras International and arrive at Paris Gare du Nord.

Allow extra time at St Pancras for ticket gates, security, and passport checks. Eurostar is not like boarding a domestic train at the last minute. If this is the first leg of a long cross-border itinerary, arrive earlier than the minimum check-in time.

### Paris Gare du Nord to Gare de Lyon

The Paris connection is a station change, not a platform change.

Eurostar arrives at Paris Gare du Nord. The Barcelona train leaves from Paris Gare de Lyon. The standard transfer is by RER D, which links the two stations directly.

Allow about 60 minutes for this transfer. Allow more if you have heavy luggage, are travelling with children, or are connecting to the last suitable Barcelona train of the day.

### Paris to Barcelona by TGV INOUI

The Paris to Barcelona leg is the one to plan around.

Direct TGV INOUI services link Paris Gare de Lyon and Barcelona Sants in about 6 hours 50 minutes at the fastest. Current SNCF Connect route data shows around three direct trains on many dates, with the first departure at 06:42 and the last at 14:42.

That limited frequency is why this leg should shape the rest of your booking. Check Paris to Barcelona first. Then choose a Eurostar that gives you a workable Paris connection.

### Barcelona to Alicante by Renfe

Renfe runs the Barcelona to Alicante leg from Barcelona Sants to Alicante/Alacant Terminal.

Renfe markets key services on this corridor as Euromed, with Intercity services also running on some schedules. Current timetable data shows direct services taking around 5 hours 24 minutes on some departures, with the first train leaving Barcelona Sants at 07:15 and arriving at 12:39.

## Journey Time and Overnight Planning

The full London to Alicante train journey normally takes the better part of a full travel day, and usually works better with an overnight stop.

The core train times alone add up to roughly 14 hours before station transfers, waiting time, and schedule gaps. Full-route results on booking sites often show around 24 to 26 hours because the best connections do not always line up neatly.

There are three sensible ways to plan it:

PlanHow it worksBest forOvernight in ParisEurostar to Paris on day one, TGV to Barcelona and Renfe to Alicante on day twoA calmer first day and less risk on the Paris connectionOvernight in BarcelonaEurostar and TGV to Barcelona on day one, Renfe to Alicante on day twoTravelers who want the long international leg finished firstSame-day attemptEarly Eurostar, cross-Paris transfer, TGV to Barcelona, late onward train if availableExperienced travelers with flexible tickets and low tolerance for stopoversFor most travelers, Barcelona is the more practical overnight split. You finish the long international leg on day one, then take a simpler domestic Spanish train on day two.

Paris also works well if the Paris to Barcelona departure you need is early. Arrive in Paris the evening before and start fresh from Gare de Lyon the next morning.

## Tickets and Booking Order

Book the route in the order that protects the scarcest connection first.

Start with Paris to Barcelona. There are fewer direct trains on this leg than on London to Paris, and it is the leg most likely to force an overnight stop. Once that train is fixed, book Eurostar to Paris with enough time for the Gare du Nord to Gare de Lyon transfer.

Then book Barcelona to Alicante with Renfe or a reseller that clearly shows the operator, station, and ticket conditions.

You can book the journey as separate tickets or through a reseller that combines several European operators. Separate tickets can be cheaper and clearer, but they may not protect you if a delay on one leg causes you to miss the next train. If you book separate tickets, avoid tight connections.

## Fare Expectations

London to Alicante train fares vary widely by date, booking window, and route.

Booking sites show a wide range of headline prices. Some promote low starting fares for individual legs; others show full-route prices in the hundreds of pounds or euros. That is normal for a journey with three separately priced long-distance legs.

The main price drivers are:

- how early you book Eurostar;
- whether the Paris to Barcelona TGV still has lower fares available;
- whether you travel in summer, school holidays, or around weekends;
- whether you choose flexible tickets;
- whether you use a rail pass and pay separate reservation fees.

Price each leg separately and compare it with any through-route quote you find. If you are travelling in peak season, check fares before committing to accommodation.

## Interrail and Eurail Passes

Interrail and Eurail can work for London to Alicante, but reservations are essential on every leg.

A pass does not let you walk onto every train on this route. Eurostar requires a passholder reservation. The Paris to Barcelona TGV is a high-speed international train and also requires a reservation. Spanish long-distance trains generally require reservations too.

Reservation fees add to the pass cost, and passholder seats can sell out on busy trains even when standard tickets are still available.

A pass is most attractive if London to Alicante is part of a longer European rail trip. For a single journey, compare the total pass cost plus reservations against normal point-to-point tickets.

## Practical Tips for the Journey

The route is much easier when you treat it as three connected journeys rather than one simple train ride.

Leave a generous connection in Paris. Gare du Nord to Gare de Lyon is straightforward by RER D, but you still need to leave the Eurostar platform, find the RER, pay or tap through with a valid ticket, and reach the correct departure area at Gare de Lyon. Allow at least 60 minutes.

Barcelona Sants is easier than changing stations in Paris, but Spanish long-distance trains involve ticket checks before boarding. Do not cut the connection too fine.

Pack light if you can. A smaller bag makes the Paris transfer much less stressful on stairs, escalators, and busy platforms.

Check the destination name carefully when booking the final leg. Alicante's main railway station appears as Alicante/Alacant Terminal, Alacant-Terminal, or Alicante Terminal depending on the booking site. All refer to the same station.