What is Zone 1 and Zone 2 in London?
Zone 1 covers all of Central London. Zone 2 encircles zone 1 and covers a large swathe of the inner London suburbs. The link below will show you a map which shows you which stations (Underground, DLR and National Rail) are in zones 1 and 2.
What places are in Zone 3?
Download coordinates as: KML
Station | Local authority | Managed by |
---|---|---|
East Putney | Wandsworth | London Underground |
Elverson Road | Lewisham | Docklands Light Railway |
Forest Gate | Newham | TfL Rail |
Forest Hill | Lewisham | London Overground |
What zone is Chelsea?
While Chelsea doesn’t have its own tube station, the closest stations are only a short walk from the area – these are Sloane Square on the District and Circle lines and South Kensington on the District, Circle and Piccadilly lines. Both are in Travelcard Zone 1.
What zone is Heathrow?
Zone 6
Heathrow Terminal 5 Underground station is in the basement of the terminal building. All stations are in Travelcard Zone 6.
What zone is central London?
zone 1
Central London is zone 1, zone 2 is the ring around zone 1, zone 3 is the ring around 2 and so on.
What zone is Soho London?
Fare zone 1
Fare zone 1 is the central zone of Transport for London’s zonal fare system used by the London Underground, London Overground, Docklands Light Railway and National Rail. For most tickets, travel through Zone 1 is more expensive than journeys of similar length not crossing this zone.
Which London Underground stations are in Zone 1?
Old Street, Angel, Pimlico, Tower Gateway, Aldgate East, Euston, Vauxhall, Elephant & Castle, Borough, London Bridge, Earl’s Court, Marylebone, Edgware Road, Lambeth North and Waterloo are in zone 1 but not in or on the Circle line. Every London Underground line has stations in zone 1.
How many fare zones are there in Greater London?
The list includes all railway stations in Greater London and those outside the boundary that are included in: 1 London fare zones 1-9, or 2 fare zones G and W for Oyster card pay-as-you-go, or 3 the area of the Freedom Pass scheme; which covers parts of the counties of Buckinghamshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Kent and Surrey.
What are Zone 7 and Zone 8 in London Underground?
Zone 7 consists of the Hertfordshire stations on the Metropolitan Line and the first London Overground and West Anglia Main Line stations outside zone 6. Zone 8 consists of Chalfont & Latimer, the remaining London Overground stations where TfL set fares, and stations in Kent where Oyster is valid. Zone 9 consists of Amersham, Brentwood and Chesham.
How far apart are tube stations in London?
Underground stations within this zone are typically close together; for instance Covent Garden and Leicester Square tube stations are only an eighth of a mile apart, a network record. The zone originates from two central London zones that were created on 4 October 1981 named City and West End, in which flat fares applied.