
Why people leave Northern
- Operator-only journey planner. The app handles Northern services and surfaces Northern trains. Once a journey involves TransPennine Express, Avanti West Coast, or LNER, the planner stops being useful even when the connection is at the same station.
- No split-ticket logic. Northern does not look for cheaper combinations. On a Liverpool-to-Newcastle trip the same fare often splits cheaper through Manchester or Leeds, but the operator app cannot find the saving.
- Live updates are operator-specific. Northern’s own service status is reliable. Connections through other operators do not get the same prompt push, which matters for cross-operator commuters.
- Reservation seat selection is limited. Northern is mostly unreserved local services, so seat selection in the booking flow is shorter than rivals. Long-distance services through Northern still go through the gate but with less choice on the booking screen.
- Barcode Season tickets versus Smart Season tickets confuse new users. The app offers both and reviewers note that picking the right one for a route is not always obvious.
If any of those make you compare, here are 7 Northern alternatives worth installing.
Which app should you choose?
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Trainline if you want every UK operator plus an EU rail catalogue in one app.
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TrainPal if split-ticket savings on cross-operator routes are what Northern cannot surface.
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TransPennine Express if your cross-Pennine journey is on TPE rather than Northern.
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Avanti West Coast if you travel from Manchester or Liverpool to London via the West Coast.
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LNER if your long-distance route is via Newcastle to Edinburgh or London.
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Trainsplit if split-ticketing on regional UK routes is the only feature you actually need.
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FlixBus if price beats speed for a regional cross-country journey.
Stay on Northern if most of your trips are on Northern services, you commute on a Barcode Season ticket, and the operator’s published fares are the cheapest you can find without splitting.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Coverage | Booking fee | Free | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trainline | All UK + EU rail | UK + 30 countries | Small per ticket | Yes | 4.7 |
| TrainPal | Cross-operator splits | UK + EU | None on UK | Yes | 4.7 |
| TransPennine Express | TPE direct | UK | Zero | Yes | 4.5 |
| Avanti West Coast | West Coast direct | UK | Zero | Yes | 4.4 |
| LNER | East Coast direct | UK | Zero | Yes | 4.7 |
| Trainsplit | UK split-ticket specialist | UK | Commission on savings | Yes | 4.7 |
| FlixBus | Long-distance budget | 30+ countries | Included | Yes | 4.7 |
1. Trainline -- every UK operator in one app
Trainline carries every UK rail operator including Northern, plus the EU catalogue. The planner finds combinations that involve a Northern leg plus a TransPennine, Avanti, or LNER leg in one search, with one wallet for the entire journey.
Trainline vs Northern for a typical Manchester-to-Sheffield trip returns the same Northern fare with a small booking fee. The advantage shows when the trip continues beyond Northern, where the operator app cannot route or sell the next leg.
Advantages:
- Every UK operator plus EU rail
- Real-time disruption alerts across operators
- One wallet for multi-operator journeys
- Wear OS companion for tickets
Disadvantages:
- Small booking fee per ticket
- Heavy upsell to Trainline+
- Split-ticketing gated behind subscription
Pricing: Free. Per-ticket booking fee. Trainline+ adds SplitSave for a monthly fee.
Download: Aptoide · Google Play
Bottom line: Pick Trainline whenever a journey touches anything other than Northern.
2. TrainPal -- split-tickets without a subscription
TrainPal applies the same split-ticket logic Trainline charges for under SplitSave but does it free. On routes that cross Northern into TransPennine or LNER, TrainPal routinely surfaces splits Northern cannot find because Northern does not look outside its own network.
TrainPal vs Northern on a Liverpool-to-Newcastle trip will return a cheaper total fare more often than not, because the split logic factors in cross-operator interchanges. The operator app surfaces only Northern’s published fares.
Advantages:
- Zero booking fees on UK rail
- Free split-ticketing on cross-operator routes
- 47-country European catalogue
- Best Price Guarantee
Disadvantages:
- Smaller user base than Trainline
- UI rough edges in places
- Refund flow runs through chat
Pricing: Free. No booking fee on UK tickets.
Download: Aptoide · Google Play
Bottom line: Pick TrainPal if your trips routinely combine Northern with another operator and you want the cheapest cross-operator total.
3. TransPennine Express -- the parallel cross-Pennine operator
TransPennine Express runs cross-Pennine services on the Manchester-Leeds-York corridor and beyond, often duplicating routes Northern also serves but with faster timings on the long-distance trips. The operator app sells direct with zero booking fee and the wallet works at gates offline.
TransPennine Express vs Northern on a Manchester-to-York trip is sometimes a choice of speed: TPE’s services are typically faster, Northern’s are typically cheaper on shorter local hops. The operator app sells whichever fare you pick with no markup.
Advantages:
- Zero booking fees on TPE fares
- Direct sale of TPE Advance fares
- Real-time service alerts
- Offline ticket wallet
Disadvantages:
- TPE routes only
- No split-ticket logic
- Reviews mention payment screen quirks on older Android
Pricing: Free. Ticket prices match TransPennine fares.
Download: Aptoide · Google Play
Bottom line: Pick TransPennine Express if your trip is actually on a TPE service rather than Northern.
4. Avanti West Coast -- Manchester or Liverpool to London
Avanti West Coast runs from London Euston to Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham, and Glasgow via the West Coast Main Line. The operator app sells the same fares as the Avanti website with zero booking fee, plus in-flow seat selection and free Wi-Fi pre-login.
Avanti West Coast vs Northern is a different product. Northern handles regional commuting; Avanti handles intercity. The two complement each other for any trip that involves a Manchester or Liverpool start and London end.
Advantages:
- Zero booking fees on Avanti routes
- Seat selection in the booking flow
- Real-time West Coast alerts
- Free pre-login Wi-Fi
Disadvantages:
- West Coast routes only
- No split-ticketing
- App ratings dip after UI redesigns
Pricing: Free. Match Avanti’s published fares.
Download: Aptoide · Google Play
Bottom line: Pick Avanti for Manchester or Liverpool to London. It is the operator running the actual train.
5. LNER -- East Coast routes from Northern stations
LNER runs from London King’s Cross north through Doncaster, York, Newcastle, and on to Edinburgh. For Northern users in the Yorkshire and North East areas, LNER is often the next operator their journey touches.
LNER vs Northern is operator-direct vs operator-direct on different routes. The operator app handles its own fares at zero booking fee with one-button refunds. For a Sheffield-to-Edinburgh journey via Doncaster or York, LNER’s app sells the relevant leg cleanly.
Advantages:
- Zero booking fees on LNER fares
- One-button refunds
- Offline ticket wallet
- Strong real-time platform updates
Disadvantages:
- East Coast routes only
- No split-ticket logic
- Limited multi-operator planning
Pricing: Free. Match LNER’s published fares.
Download: Google Play
Bottom line: Pick LNER for long-distance East Coast trips that start at a Northern station.
6. Trainsplit -- UK split-ticket specialist
Trainsplit is the original split-ticket app and still the most aggressive at finding savings. The engine looks for combinations TrainPal sometimes misses on quieter routes, and the savings calculator shows exactly how much each split saves before you commit.
Trainsplit vs Northern is a different category. Northern sells fares; Trainsplit finds combinations. A typical Manchester-to-Leeds direct trip will not save much; a cross-operator long-distance journey often saves more.
Advantages:
- Sharpest UK split-ticket engine
- Transparent split logic before purchase
- Refund process documented per leg
- No subscription wall
Disadvantages:
- UK only
- Commission on savings
- Simpler UI than TrainPal or Trainline
Pricing: Free. Commission on the savings the split unlocks.
Download: Google Play
Bottom line: Pick Trainsplit when split-ticketing is the only feature you want and the most aggressive logic matters.
7. FlixBus -- long-distance coach budget pick
FlixBus is the major intercity coach operator in the UK and Europe and usually the price leader on cross-country corridors. The app handles search, booking, seat selection, and live tracking across the UK and 30-plus countries.
FlixBus vs Northern is not a like-for-like comparison. Northern is regional rail; FlixBus is intercity coach. For a Newcastle-to-Manchester trip the FlixBus fare often sits well below the cheapest rail Advance, in exchange for an extra two or three hours.
Advantages:
- Often cheapest cross-country option
- One wallet across UK + 30 countries
- Live coach tracker
- Frequent flash sales
Disadvantages:
- Significantly slower than rail
- Thinner UK regional stop coverage than National Express
- Wi-Fi quality varies
Pricing: Free. Booking fee in the headline fare.
Download: Aptoide · Google Play
Bottom line: Pick FlixBus when price is the priority and you can spare the extra hours.
How to choose
The right Northern alternative depends on what the operator app misses for your trips.
If you ride trains that leave Northern’s network, install Trainline. Cross-operator planning and one wallet are the headline features.
If your trips routinely combine Northern with another operator, install TrainPal. Free split-ticketing on cross-operator routes that Northern cannot find.
If your actual train is TransPennine, Avanti West Coast, or LNER, install that operator’s app. Direct buying with zero booking fee beats any aggregator on the same fare.
If split-ticketing alone is the feature you want, install Trainsplit. The most aggressive UK split-finder.
If price matters more than speed for a long-distance regional trip, install FlixBus. Coach often beats both rail and other coach operators on price.
Stay on Northern if most of your trips are on Northern services, you commute on a Barcode Season ticket, and the operator’s published fares are the cheapest you find without splitting.
FAQ
Can I buy Northern tickets in Trainline or TrainPal?
Yes. Both apps sell Northern tickets at the same operator fare. Trainline adds a small booking fee, TrainPal does not.
Is there a free Northern alternative with no booking fees?
TrainPal charges no booking fee on UK rail tickets. Operator apps for the trains you actually ride (TransPennine Express, Avanti West Coast, LNER) are also fee-free on their own fares.
Which app finds the cheapest Northern split-tickets?
Trainsplit is the specialist for UK splits and is generally the sharpest at cross-operator savings. TrainPal applies similar logic for free without commission on the savings.
Can I refund a Northern ticket bought through another app?
Refunds run through whichever app sold the ticket. Trainline, TrainPal, and operator apps each have their own refund flow under the standard rail terms.
What is the best app for cross-Pennine journeys?
If your service is Northern, use Northern or Trainline. If your service is TransPennine Express, the TPE operator app sells direct with no fee. For mixed services, Trainline or TrainPal handle the routing in one wallet.
Is FlixBus cheaper than Northern on regional trips?
On long-distance regional corridors FlixBus often undercuts rail by a meaningful margin, especially booked ahead. On short Northern-style commutes regional rail almost always wins on price.