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Review: we take the Caledonian Sleeper train from Euston to Inverness

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This is my review of the Caledonian Sleeper train, from London Euston to Inverness.

There is a fascination about long train journeys, especially multi-day journeys, which I share. Sadly the Orient Express is not on the HfP planning board at the moment, and the Trans Siberian Express is unlikely to make the cut either. I had to settle for a, let’s say, less ambitious – but more relevant for HfP readers – trip.

I seem to have missed out on a student phase of travelling around Europe on cheap ramshackle sleeper trains, but I have been on one before. A few years ago we went from Stockholm to Kiruna in Lapland by overnight train as a family (Rob reviewed it here).

Caledonian Sleeper review

We loved the adventure but it was definitely lacking in luxury, and travelling with small children didn’t help. I was excited to try a sleeper train to Inverness, the most Northern destination that the Caledonian Sleeper trains offer, and experience something a little plusher. What did we get for the £150 million invested in new rolling stock?

Buying my Caledonian Sleeper ticket

I booked a ticket from London Euston to Inverness for a Caledonian Double En-Suite for single occupancy – the highest category of room available.

The one-way ticket price for my trip was £303.70 which included access to the station lounges and breakfast. This represents a 25% discount to the normal price due to a January promotion. The train ticket was funded by HfP and the company did not know we would be reviewing it.

Availability can be limited. My ticket was booked in November 2023 to travel in early January 2024, and even then there were multiple dates where the Caledonian Double rooms had already gone.

I just looked at availability in April 2024 and there is only ONE day, Sunday 7th, when a Caledonian Double room is still bookable between London and Inverness. There are NO days in May and NO days in June, although a couple of days remain in July. You need to book now for August to have a relatively good choice of dates. This is despite the £425 price tag for one person or £500 for a couple. Tickets are refundable which may mean that people book speculatively and cancel later.

The train was due to depart at 21.15 but I arrived early to check out the Caledonian Sleeper lounge at London Euston. Access was included with my Caledonian Double ticket booking. Please see my review here for details of what you get in the lounge and which room categories get access.

Caledonian Sleeper review

Boarding began at 20.30, 45 minutes before departure.

I was welcomed by staff who explained how the train was laid out. Passengers with large luggage were shown to a storage facility but I was travelling light and could go straight to my designated cabin. The corridor is very tight – one person at a time, as you can see above.

This review is based on the top accommodation option – the Caledonian Double En-Suite cabin.

Other options include:

  • Club Room En-Suite – effectively the same facilities as my room but with two bunk beds instead of a double (£330 one way for single occupancy, £405 one way for two)
  • Classic Room – two bunk beds but no shower, no lounge access, no free breakfast (you can pay) and a lower chance of being able to secure a Club Car dining table (£265 one way for single occupancy, £330 one way for two)
  • Seated Coach – a standard train seat, and not something I would necessarily recommend for an 11 hour overnight trip unless you are keen to save on hotel costs in London or Scotland (£55 each way)

Inside my Caledonian Double En-Suite cabin

I received a room card key and was shown to my cabin. In order to lock your room you have to hold your card over the reader – scanning BOTH sides of your key card. Whilst this is described on the card I needed help from a fellow passenger who had also struggled.

Although my room was just a small box room, if you’re being critical, it contained everything you would expect from a midscale hotel. There were two bottles of still water on a shelf above the bed, chocolates on your pillow and snacks on the bed. I also found menus for the in-room or seated coach dining and for breakfast.

The bed was very comfortable but not very long. I am 5″9 and I could just about stretch out on my side of the double bed. I ended up sleeping diagonally – if you are very tall and with a partner you might be forced to curl up!

Caledonian Sleeper bed

The other end of my room had a single sink beneath a small window. As this was January, it was dark for virtually the entire journey, so there would be no views of the Scottish countryside for me.

On the left was a mirror, some hand soap, a hand towel, two hangers on the wall, a bin and a pencil for completing your breakfast menu. The floor is carpetted and there is enough space next to and under the bed for hand luggage. I personally liked the checked fabric wall covering at the top and end of the bed – a very gentle reminder that I was on a trip to Scotland.

The cabin is fitted with sockets and USB plugs. WiFi was very patchy and I had to log-in several times during the trip.

Caledonian Sleeper bedroom

On my bed I found a very cute amenity kit containing shower gel, shampoo, hand cream, hand cleansing gel, body lotion and lemon lip balm in large (100ml for the shower gel and shampoo) bottles. These were by the Scottish brand Arran.

Caledonian Sleeper amenity kit

I was curious as to how the bathroom would be fitted and here it is. It is certainly very small but functional with a bench to sit on whilst showering!

Caledonia Sleeper shower

The bench lid opens up to unveil your own private toilet – so, yes, you’re basically showering whilst sitting on the loo:

Caledonian Sleeper toilet

The shower control was to the right with two wall-mounted bottles of conditioning shampoo and shower gel from Arran. Large towels were provided in a netsack hanging next to the bathroom door.

Caledonian Sleeper shower

The Club Car on the Caledonian Sleeper

I was advised by a friend to head straight to the Club Car after boarding as it can get very busy. There are two Club Cars on the train, the one in the front going to Inverness and the one in the back going to Aberdeen, with the train splitting into three during the night.

The Club Car has a number of seating options. Large tables can sit up to eight if you really squeeze in, and had already been taken when I turned up shortly after boarding. These Club Car photos were taken the following morning.

Caledonian Sleeper Club Car

There are a few tables for two which were also already occupied when I came in – it seems you really need to move quickly, even though guests in Club bedrooms have priority over those in the standard rooms and standard seating part of the train:

Club Car Caledonian Sleeper

For single travelers like me there are bar stools on the side, which were available. I guess this was the most efficient solution given the limited space but I have to acknowledge that they are not as comfy as the table seats.

Caledonian Sleeper Club Car

The menu was quite impressive with two starters, three mains and three desserts including a cheese board. Light bites and savoury and sweet snacks were offered and there is a broad range of alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks.

I ordered the prosciutto wrapped pork fillet with black pudding mash with apple braised red cabbage. I thought it was surprisingly tasty and at £15 good value for money.

Caledonian Sleeper Club Car food

For dessert I chose a chocolate brownie for £10. I wasn’t too keen on the presentation with the thick chocolate sauce and pea shoot on top but the taste was good. (It was served whole – I broke off a piece so you can see the sponge inside.)

Caledonian Sleeper Club Car

My night on the Caledonian Sleeper

After dinner I settled in my cabin for the night. I was wondering how much sleep I would get being a very light sleeper.

It did not start off very promisingly. The ride is not smooth. On the contrary, it is quite rocky – if you were on an aircraft, the seatbelt sign would definitely have been on for much of the night due to turbulence. However, I slept in at some point, woke up once briefly in the middle of the night and then slept in again, waking up in the early hours on the final run into Inverness, where we were due to arrive at 8.45am.

I think if the train had continued at the same rattling speed it started off in London I wouldn’t have slept much at all, but as there are long passages where it moves very slowly and is even stationary (the journey is 11 hours!) I arrived rested at the other end.

The shower

As you can see from the pictures above the shower is not very roomy, to put it mildy.

I felt obliged to try it in the morning, and having said that, it worked very well for me. The water was hot but the supply is understandably on a timer. I had to restart it several times to get the length of shower I wanted, and I didn’t attempt to wash my hair – although someone with a shorter cut would probably be OK. A good sense of balance is an advantage but you can always sit on the bench.

The drain worked well in my shower so there was no risk of water overflow. That said the train tilted quite heavily whilst I was washing and some water gathered in one corner, causing a small leak into the cabin. It was manageable though and I dried it off with a towel.

Breakfast on the Caledonian Sleeper

Having had dinner the night before in the Club Car I thought I’d try the in-room option for breakfast.

I kept my order simple with coffee (from a bag), orange juice and Scottish porridge but I also could have gone for Traditional Scottish Breakfast, Smoked Scottish Fish Frittata, Vegan Breakfast, Sausage Rolls etc.

My breakfast was delivered in a paper bag as you can see below.

Caledonian Sleeper breakfast

As there is no table in the cabin I decided to take my bag down to the Club Car anyway rather than eating on the bed. In addition to milk for the coffee and honey for the porridge I received an oat bar as an extra item. My porridge was very good and even the coffee bag wasn’t too bad.

Caledonian Sleeper breakfast

The Caledonian Sleeper lounge in Inverness

My train arrived in Inverness 15 minutes early at 8.30am. As this is a bit early for sightseeing, especially on a very cold January day, I decided to keep warm in the Caledonian Sleeper lounge in Inverness and have another coffee there.

The lounge can be found opposite the entrance to the train station on the left. I was the only passenger to use it although I assume it is busier in the evening when it acts as a departure lounge. The lounge is of course much smaller than the Euston one but has all the same features and feels very cosy.

Caledonian Sleeper lounge Inverness

What I thought especially noteworthy that if you do not want to use the shower on the train or want to sleep until last minute, the lounge in Inverness also has a shower. It is a good alternative if you can’t face using the small space on the train.

Caledonian Sleeper lounge Inverness

There are also dedicated Caledonian Sleeper lounges in Dundee, Fort William, Leuchars / St Andrews and Perth. There are shared lounges at Edinburgh Waverley (LNER), Glasgow Central (Avanti) and Aberdeen (ScotRail).

Conclusion

I wasn’t sure what to expect from this trip, but I had a good experience travelling on the Caledonian Sleeper to Inverness. For me, it had a strong sense of adventure that I no longer get from short haul flying and I am keen to repeat it with my family in tow.

The food was good and I got a decent nights sleep. The Caledonian Double En-Suite cabin is well thought through and easily comparable to a good mid-scale hotel room, although a lot smaller of course.

I was travelling in early January and it was not as busy as it could have been, although the Club rooms always seem to sell out. The Club Car seating could be a challenge if you are in a group. The tables seem to go very fast and you basically have to make this your priority immediately after boarding.

Whilst the trip is certainly not cheap, it looks better value when compared to the cost of an extra night in an equivalent London or Edinburgh hotel. It is also a lot more relaxing than getting up at 4am to catch the first flight, something most of us will have had to do far too many times during our careers.

The Caledonian Sleeper website is here.

Comments (146)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Panda Mick says:

    For those wondering why this gets booked up so far in advance: There’s a tonne of companies, like the very excellent City Mountaineering, who do trips to Ben Nevis, etc, with the train as part of the trip ( https://www.citymountaineering.com/trip/ben-nevis-may for example). These are all planned the year before, and get booked in bulk

    • Bagoly says:

      Do the SNP or other political parties mandate their MPs to travel train rather than ‘plane where possible?
      If so, Scottish MPs going between constituency and Westminster would take up a large chunk of the capacity for plenty of days, and be insensitive to price.

      • Stu_N says:

        Doubt it – you regularly see MPs of all parties on Thursday and Friday evening flights between London and Scotland. I doubt they are insensitive to price – the travel budget wouldn’t last long at a grand a week round trip.

        • Andrew. says:

          I remember one night going to Edinburgh when Tony was PM and I had the late Robin sitting next to me, the late Alastair and Gordon to my left, George a few seats behind.

          The late Charlie was a regular on the sleeper when you could smoke.

          You’ve got to be practical though. MPs have family commitments so a flight gives the opportunity for a family dinner and bedtime stories. If you’re North of Edinburgh the Highland sleeper arrives into StTG at 5am. The lowland means changing trains at EDB.

          I’ve arrived at 05:20 in the snow on the old cheap deals to find my parents have forgotten not to set the deadbolt at night…

      • Pb says:

        I suspect it was rather like the only train in Wales left with full service restaurant facilities running from Cardiff to North Wales ( bar Swansea to London once a day) , subsidised for the political members .

  • Bagoly says:

    It would be interesting to know what proportion of the passengers originate at each end.
    The logic for the Scottish government subsidising it is presumably more to enable residents to reach London than tourists to reach Scotland?

    • ken says:

      The campaign to keep the sleeper services whenever they have been under threat (every 20 years or so) has been led by peers and landowners alongside train enthusiasts.

      There are probably close to 30 trains a day from Edinburgh and not far that from Glasgow to London on weekdays.

      This is a really niche service for those cities.

      The highland service make a little more sense given the time the day train takes.

    • John says:

      Subsidies can work for both directions – if a tourist generates more than £200 of tax on their visit to Scotland, which may be the case for those who are willing to dump £300+ on a train ride, it’s a net positive

  • Bagoly says:

    The dining car looks well designed, both practically with different seating options, and aesthetically.
    The cabins less so, although good that they put connecting ones for young families.
    Having cabins with only one level of bed is pretty wasteful.

    • Martin says:

      The Caledonian Sleeper has always struck me as one of those “emotional” subsidies allegedly good for the tourist industry. Last time I looked, it was the most heavily subsidized train in Scotland by a long way. As a resident of Scotland, I find its arrival times in London doesn’t suit me, as I don’t sleep well on trains. If I use the train to London, then I use LNER.

  • Michael C says:

    Family of 3 (1 child) discount price only works on the “club” i.e. bunk rooms: GBP475 one way (Caledonian room as reviewed is 925).

    Even though the webpage asks for railcards, this made no difference to the price quoted.

    So I guess you have one adult check in 45 mins early while the other sprints to the restaurant car to bagsy a table?! And then the same again at 5 am for breakfast!

    • ken says:

      Railcards will give you a discount on the standard seats but not the sleeper compartments

    • John says:

      Breakfast rarely gets full. If you board the train as soon as it’s ready (they announce it in the lounge) and just dump your stuff in the room nobody else will be in the lounge car

    • martin says:

      Is it cheaper if you look further out? For a random day in April, a family of 3 or 4 to/from Glasgow is £285 for the standard bunks (with an interconnecting door) or £385 for the club bunks (no interconnecting doors because the loos are in the way). For the same dates from Inverness, it’s £385/405.

      We’ve done it a few times from Glasgow to London, because we can put the kids to sleep at my parents’ house at their usual bedtime, then wake them up at 10pm, bundle them into a cab, and have them back in bed on the train 20 minutes later.

  • Chris W says:

    This doesn’t look so bad. Not sure I understand the sprint to the dining car to score a seat for a 10pm dinner when its dark outside given there are so many better food options around Euston station. I think I would stay in my cabin, read a book/Netflix and then go to bed.

  • Joe says:

    I took this to Fort William in October 2021. Arrived in Edinburgh having not slept a wink and was met with a knock on the door telling us that the remainder of the journey would be by coach! Return journey was the same which certainly wasn’t what we were hoping for but I did at least manage to sleep a bit on the return.
    We were in the bunk bed rooms which are really tiny and the shower was practically useless but having the toilet was quite useful.
    Overall a massive disappointment, the only consolation was we got a full refund!

  • Ryan says:

    It seems the marketing strategy of ‘waking up in The Highlands’ must clearly be cutting through.

    As Rob has mentioned, there is little to no availability on the northbound services to Inverness.

    Contrast that with the southbound services to London and the availability opens up considerably.

    In my experience, I was awake most of the journey on the numerous times I have taken this trip. The beds are very small, the coupling of the carriages in the middle of the night is a noisy affair, and for me, the romanticism of the ‘journey of an evening’ far outweighs the practicalities and comfort of the trip itself.

  • Peter says:

    I used to take this a lot in the past when I worked for a Scots company as it was better for a day trip to train up and fly back. I was told the reason for the Caledonian start/stop is that freight trains have priority in the morning hours (or maybe Caledonian takes a super cheap network rail charge with the start/stop result). I once took it, left Euston and then two hours later we were back outside Euston (!) but still made it to Edinburgh on time. Also the train splitting en route can be alarming on first journey as you can go to sleep travelling in one direction and wake up travelling in the other. They also have Flexipass tickets of ten for regulars and corporates.

    • John says:

      In the first half of the year, on certain days of the week (generally weekends) they tend to use the ECML as the WCML is closed.

      This typically involves going to Wembley Yard and reversing almost back to Euston, before going along the North London Incline to the ECML. You can tell when this happens because the scheduled departure time is a lot earlier on those evenings. And the scheduled arrival in London may also be later than usual.

      There is a lot of padding in the timetable. The day trains take 4.5 hours to Edinburgh/Glasgow, but the sleepers are scheduled for 6-7 hours so there has to be a lot of waiting

      • lumma says:

        The day trains can go 125mph Vs 87mph for the class 92s on the sleeper and can corner faster

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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