vanti West Coast could continue to operate long-distance services between London, Manchester and Glasgow for the next nine years, the Government has announced.
It marks a remarkable turnaround for the firm, which a year ago was threatened with being axed from the UK’s flagship West Coast Main Line after its services descended into chaos in the summer of 2022, when up to one in four trains were cancelled due to driver shortages.
Transport Secretary Mark Harper announced on Tuesday that Avanti’s contract, which was due to expire next month after two six-month extensions, would run for three more years – with the option of it being extended for a further six.
This would keep Avanti, which operates out of Euston, in place until 2032.
Mr Harper said he had decided to award Avanti a long-term contract after “significant improvements” for passengers on punctuality and reliability.
A full timetable of 264 trains on weekdays has been restored and cancellations fell to 1.1 per cent of services in July, compared with 13 per cent in January.
Mr Harper said: “The routes Avanti West Coast operate provide vital connections, and passengers must feel confident that they can rely on the services to get them where they need to be at the right time.
“Over the past year, short-term contracts were necessary to rebuild the timetable and reduce cancellations. Now Avanti are back on track, providing long-term certainty for both the operator and passengers will best ensure that improvements continue.”
Avanti trains carried 6.8m passengers between January and March this year, 69 per cent of pre-pandemic levels. Due to the disruption during the summer and autumn of 2022, when drivers refused to work overtime, it ran one of the lowest percentages of services of all UK rail operators.
Between April and June, its punctuality deteriorated on the same period the previous year, with only 46.1 per cent of trains on time – the worst performance in the country, according to the Office of Rail and Road.
Over the same period, 3.5 per cent of its trains were cancelled – down from 7.8 per cent in the same period a year earlier, the UK’s most improved performance.
Avanti, which also operates trains to Birmingham and Liverpool, has been among the worst hit by 18 months of national strikes by the RMT and Aslef unions over pay and conditions.
The Department for Transport said the potential length of the new contract would enable Avanti to plan ahead and introduce new trains.
In March, the DfT had floated the suggestion of Avanti remaining in place until 2032 as it backed away from demands for the form, part of First Group, to be axed.
The DfT said that a “core contract” of three years would start on October 15, with a maximum possible term of nine years. It said that after three years, the Transport Secretary could terminate the contract at any point with three months’ notice.








