Christmas Rail Travel Faces Changes Around Milton Keynes

Rail travellers planning Christmas and New Year journeys through central England are facing notable changes as major engineering works take place near Milton Keynes. From the evening of 24 December until the morning of 5 January, trains will not operate through Hanslope Junction, a busy part of the West Coast Main Line. The timing places the disruption directly within one of the most popular travel periods of the year.
The closure allows a large scale upgrade to be carried out on a junction that has frequently caused delays for passengers in recent years. Engineers will renew track, reinforce the ground beneath it, and modernise junction components along a mile long stretch. Concentrating the work into a single holiday shutdown also makes it possible to complete additional improvements along the same route while regular services are paused.
“This is a much-needed upgrade which will reduce the number of delays passengers have to experience on the railway and future-proof the West Coast Main Line for decades to come. We have worked hard with our train operator partners to limit disruption to people travelling this Christmas, but please check your journey before you travel."
How festive journeys will be affected
This development changes how festive journeys need to be planned. Direct rail connections between Milton Keynes, Northampton, Rugby, and London will not be available for over a week, meaning many trips will involve replacement buses or alternative routes. Longer journey times and busier trains elsewhere on the network are likely, especially on peak travel days.
Those heading to family visits, winter breaks, or connecting journeys should expect longer travel times and less flexibility. Allowing extra time, avoiding tight connections, and preparing for bus transfers will make journeys smoother. Some travellers may also find it easier to travel earlier or later than planned to avoid the busiest days during the closure.
Viewed through a traveller focused lens, the news is less about railway construction and more about how holiday mobility is being reshaped. While the short term impact adds complexity to festive plans, the work addresses a known source of delays on a major route. For passengers, this means accepting temporary inconvenience in exchange for more reliable journeys through one of the country’s busiest rail corridors in the years ahead.



















