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should airport-style security be introduced in uk's railway stations?

Nov 7, 2025 UK News views: 113

One Metro reader suggested X-ray screening machines be introduced (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)

Imagine you’re running late for your train. You know the doors will shut 30 seconds before departure – you still have time,you tell yourself.

The thing is,though,you don’t need to be at the platform 30 seconds before – it’s two hours,as you need to get through security first.

Airport security typically involves not only scanning your plane ticket,but also having your bag screened,your body patted down and walking through a metal detector.

And that’s all before you get on the plane – that’s just to enter the airport.

Many airports use X-ray scanners to pry open bags without needing to physically do so (Picture: Getty Images)

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Since the Huntingdon attack,security has been beefed up in major train stations (Picture: Yui Mok/PA Wire)

With crime on the up,other readers said that more pre-boarding checkpoints should be added to stations,such as sniffer dogs,but not quite on par with airports.

Some airports,for example,now have biometric border procedures,where parts of travellers’ bodies are scanned to confirm identity. This might be slightly too far for train stations,readers said,as would the hours-long check-in processes.

‘Or maybe just have more transport police available at train stations all hours of the day,’ said Gemma James.

Would airport security be feasible at railway stations?

British Transport Police patrol trains and stations in the UK,but the force has fewer than 3,000 officers.

Dozens of BTP stations face possible closure amid a hiring freeze and funding shortfalls.

The force said in January that this means ‘it is inevitable that we will have fewer police officers and staff available to respond to crimes and incidents in the future’.

Readers tend to agree that more security is needed,but not quite to the scale of airports (Picture: Shutterstock/Jim Lambert)

Will Geddes,a security specialist,doubts that building metal detectors and baggage carousels at stations would do much.

‘Nope,not feasible,’ Geddes told Metro when asked if airport-style security on trains should be considered. ‘Easily defeated and impractical to implement effectively.

‘Better to assign the security personnel to actually be on trains.’

Geddes added that,unlike airports,security measures for trains face different issues. Airports typically only have ‘single-controlled access points’,where the footfall can easily be monitored.

Train stations,meanwhile,may have multiple entrances,so ‘youths can bully and push themselves through,jumping over fences to the platform’.

Piggybacking,when someone tags along with another to gain access to an area,also called tailgating,could also be likely to happen,Geddes added.

One reader suggested that commuters should walk through metal detectors before boarding a train (Picture: Getty Images)

And it seems the government feels the same – the transport secretary has ruled out installing airport-style security scanners in stations this morning.

‘We have thousands of railway stations across the UK,and those stations have multiple entrances,multiple platforms,’ Heidi Alexander told Mornings with Ridge and Frost.

‘So what we can’t do is make life impossible for everyone.’

For Linda Reed,another Metro reader,she isn’t sure why such technology would be needed either.

She’s been riding British trains for the better part of three decades.

‘There has never been any kind of incident on any of the hundreds of journeys I have taken,’ she said.

‘Travelling by train is exceptionally safe.’

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